To bark your shin means to graze it.
she was mean and bratty, and kicked people in the shins when she thought they did something wrong to her.
Cats do not have shins. Their hind legs are elongated with a single bone, the femur, which runs from the hip to the knee joint. The lower part of their hind legs consists of bones like the tibia and fibula, but no shins as in humans.
Bark!! Bark!!
It has to do with people covering up their mistakes. The guilty party is very self-conscious about their wrongdoing, and usually is the first to point fingers or "bark" (in the analogy of the dog).
yes
The idiom "bark your shins" means to injure your shins by accidentally hitting them against something hard. It can also be used metaphorically to describe a situation where someone experiences a sudden setback or obstacle that causes pain or frustration.
The Shins was created in 1997.
It can be, with a couple of major meanings: - to make a sharp sound or cry, as by a dog (a poodle barks), or to shout commands in a similar tone - to remove tree bark / to injure skin by scraping against something (bark one's shins)
The tibiae are sometimes called the shinbones or shins.
No, this just means you have dry skin on your shins
bark on trees
No.
The homophones for "bark" are "barque" and "bark." "Barque" refers to a type of sailing ship, while "bark" can mean the sound made by dogs or the outer covering of a tree.
Yes, dogs do bark. They bark when they see something or when they feel aware of a presence. "Bark Bark" "woof woof" says the dog.
she was mean and bratty, and kicked people in the shins when she thought they did something wrong to her.
The cannon bone of a horse's leg is affected when they get bucked shins.
No, unless the bark falls of the tree in a noisy fashion or very close by. Oh, wait, did you mean 'bark of a dog?'