No, the Italian Greyhound is not a large breed dog.
Dogs and wolves are closely related to the coyote
Eagles are closely related to hawks.
A evolutionary form of a bird. It had wings and feathers but still probably acted like a dinosaur but im not sure.
They are not THAT closely related; bats are mammals, not birds. Both mammals and birds are vertebrate animals.
No, pronghorns and moose are not closely related. Pronghorns are actually more closely related to giraffes, while moose are part of the deer family.
Yes, the Italian Greyhound is closely related to the Greyhound dog breed.
Yes, the Italian Greyhound is closely related to the Saluki.
Yes, the Italian Greyhound is closely related to the Azawakh.
No, the Italian Greyhound isn't closely related to the Silken Windhound.
In the AKC and CKC, the Italian Greyhound is a member of the Toy group.
No, they're two separate sighthound breeds.
The languages most closely related to Latin are Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian.
Italian Portuguese French
From what I've heard French Italian Portuguese
no they are not related.
Yes. The entirety of humanity is related. It just happens that people from different ethnic backgrounds are typically less closely related than people from the same ethnic background. (Most countries are not monoethnic, for example, an Italian-American is probably more closely related to an Italian from Genoa and a Frenchman from Nice than his African-American neighbor.)
Gangsters and Cops both called sawed off shotguns Whippets because they can be easily concealed and then whipped out for use very fast, Clyde Barrow always had several in his arsenal and called them his whippet. I am third generation Police Officer, my Father was a Sheriff of a large California Sheriffs Dept. He had a cut down Remington model 11 he always carried in his car, He too called it His whippet.2nd Answerer says: I don't suppose any of those shotguns had tails. The dog was likely named this (around the 1600) because the word whip carries the connotation of "move quickly", per the Online Etymology Dictionary, related link listed below.