| T.A.F. |
Transfer Applied For:- Transfer of ownership
applied for with the Kennel Club |
| Tail set |
The position of the tail on the croup |
| Team |
Three or more dogs |
| Temperament |
Mixture of natural qualities and traits
which produce character |
| Terrier |
A dog originally used for hunting vermin |
| Terrier
front |
Narrow straight front |
| Texture |
Quality or nature of coat |
| Thick set |
Broad and solidly built |
| Thigh |
The hindquarters from hip to stifle |
| Throat |
part of neck immediately below lower jaw |
| Throatiness |
An excess of loose skin in the throat area |
| Thumb marks |
Black spots on the region of the pastern |
| Tibia |
Bone between stifle and hock joint (shin
bone) |
| Ticked |
Small area of black, flecks or coloured
hairs on a white ground |
| Tied at the
elbows |
Elbows set too close under the body, thus
restricting movement |
| Timber |
Bone, especially of the legs |
| Tipped ears |
Ears carried erect with just the tips
breaking and falling foreward |
| Topknot |
Longer hair on top of head |
| Topline |
The dogs outline from just behind the
withers to the tail set |
| Toy dog |
Small companion or lap dog |
| Trace |
A black line extending from occiput to twist
on a Pug |
| Trail |
To hunt by following ground scent |
| Transfer |
Change of ownership |
| Tri-colour |
Three-colour, black, white and tan |
| Trim |
To groom the coat by plucking or trimming |
| Trot |
A rhythmic two-beat diagonal gait in which
the feet at diagonally opposite ends of the body strike the ground
together, i.e. right hind with left front and left hind with right front |
| Tuck up |
Concave underline of body curving upwards
from end of rib to waist |
| Tuft of hair |
Bunch or collection of hairs growing
together |
| Tulip ear |
Wide ears carried with a slight forward
curve |
| Turn up |
An upturned foreface, or under jaw |
| Twist |
Term used for tail of a Pug |
| Type |
The characteristic qualities distinguishing
a breed |
| |
|
| Undercoat |
Dense, soft, short coat concealed by longer
top coat |
| Undershot |
The front teeth (incisors) of the lower jaw
projecting beyond the front teeth of the upper jaw when the mouth is
closed |
| Unilateral
chryptorchid |
One testicle descended and one hidden |
| Up-faced |
Short nose, muzzle turned up |
| Upper arm |
The humerous or bone of the foreleg, between
the shoulder blade and the elbow |
| Upright
shoulder |
Without sufficient angulation of shoulder
blades |
| Utility dogs |
Miscellaneous breeds-mainly non sporting
origin |
| |
|
| Varminty |
A keen, very bright or piercing expression |
| Veiled coat |
Fine, wispy long hair |
| Vent |
The anal opening |
| Vertebral
column |
Spine |
| Veterinarian |
An individual entitled to practise
veterinary surgery in the U.K. as a result of registration by Royal
Collect of Veterinary Surgeons |
| Veterinary
practitioner |
Individual of Royal College of Veterinary
Surgeons' supplementary register |
| Veterinary
surgeon |
Individual of Royal College of Veterinary
Surgeons' general register |
| Vice like
bite |
Strongly gripping and well fitting |
| |
|
| Walk |
gaiting pattern on which three legs are in
support of the body at all times, each foot lifting fdrom the ground one
at a time in regular sequence |
| Wall eye |
Wholly or partly, coloured light blue eye |
| Weaving |
(Crossing over/ knitting) Unsound gaiting
action which starts with twisting elbows and ends with criss-crossing and
toeing out. |
| Wedginess |
Lacking chiseling |
| Weedy |
Light-bone structure, lacking substance |
| Well laid |
Optimum shoulder angulation |
| Well sprung
ribs |
Ribs springing out from spinal column giving
correct shape |
| Wheaten |
Pale yellow or fawn colour |
| Wheel back |
The back line arched markedly over the loin |
| Whelping |
Act of giving birth to puppies |
| Whelps |
Unweaned puppies |
| Whip tail |
Carried out stiffly straight, and tapering |
| Whisker |
Longer hairs on muzzle sides and underjaw |
| Whitelies |
Dogs with untypical predominance of white
body colour |
| Wind |
To catch the scent of game |
| Wirehaired |
A coat of harsh, crisp, wiry texture |
| Withers |
The highest point of the body, immediately
behind the neck |
| Working dog |
A dog originally used for work such as
herding and guarding |
| Wrinkle |
Loose, folding skin |
| Wry mouth |
Lower jaw does not line up with upper jaw |
| |
|
| Zygomatic
arch |
Arch of bone forming lower border of eye
socket extending to base of ear. |