If the animal is a dog, then it has four feet.
(A+ Answer)
Yes they do. Claws to be exact, which is another form of nail. They also need to be clipped on a regular basis as well.
Dogs do not have fingers; they have paws with claws. The individual parts of a dog's paw are the pads, nails, and dewclaws.
Heeler dogs, also known as Australian Cattle Dogs, typically have four toes on their back feet like most other dog breeds. Extra toes, known as dewclaws, may occasionally occur, but it is not a common characteristic of Heelers.
This depends on the type of movement the horse is doing. Of course, there will be times when a horse has all four feet on the ground. When a horse is walking, it only lifts one foot into the air. When a horse is trotting, it lifts two legs off the ground. When a horse is cantering, there are times when three legs are in the air, and there are times when just two are in the air. When a horse is galloping, all four feet come off the ground.
A Cow can see all four of its feet if it turns its head to one side or another.
All dogs do have four feet, some are born with three and seem to do just fine.
dogs have four feet for running fast and stability!
no
Assuming the dogs have four feet and birds two, you need 15 dogs (60 feet) and 1 bird (2 feet) giving a total of 16 birds and dogs and 62 feet. None. Dogs have paws, not feet. Also, birds have claws, not feet.
Pluto is a dog and so has four feet - like most dogs!
Yes they do. Claws to be exact, which is another form of nail. They also need to be clipped on a regular basis as well.
Nine dogs, four people.
I don't know... like five or four feet
Dogs do not have fingers; they have paws with claws. The individual parts of a dog's paw are the pads, nails, and dewclaws.
The simple answer is yes. There are, however, dogs born with congenital defects that result in missing limbs, and many other dogs with missing limps as the result of illness or injury. Most dogs can very easily adapt to one--or even in some cases two--missing feet without a great deal of difficulty. Hind limbs are generally easier for a dog to cope with the loss of than forelimbs, but they can adapt to either.
A cow. It has four feet, four udders, two horns, two eyes, and a tail.
The conditional probability is 1/4.