“In promulgating your esoteric cogitations, or articulating your superficial sentimentalities and amicable, philosophical or psychological observations, beware of platitudinous ponderosity. Let your conversational communications possess a clarified conciseness, a compact comprehensibleness, coalescent consistency, and a concatenated cogency. Eschew all conglomerations of flatulent garrulity, jejune babblement and asinine affectations. Let your extemporaneous descantings and unpremeditated expatiations have intelligibility and veracious vivacity, without rhodomontade or thrasonical bombast. Sedulously avoid all polysyllabic profundity, pompous prolixity, psittaceous vacuity, ventriloquial verbosity and vaniloquent vapidity. Shun double-entendres, purient pscosity, and pestiferous profanity, obscurant or apparent.”
We trained our first Sheltie (Bennie) to sneeze on command. He had also had learned ‘sit.’ The greatest party gag of all was when my husband (very drunk & showing off,) asked Bennie to “sit down and sneeze.” He did both.
blunebottle over 6 years ago
Kids taught our lab to say “Hello.”
REROW…it really did sound like hello.
Ida No over 6 years ago
“Hello my baby, hello my darling… Is that enough, or do you want dinner theater with that?”
Doctor Toon over 6 years ago
Tricks are another one of those dog things our St Bernard just doesn’t do
That’s OK, when she “speaks” it’s usually loud enough for the neighbors to hear
Little Caesar over 6 years ago
“In promulgating your esoteric cogitations, or articulating your superficial sentimentalities and amicable, philosophical or psychological observations, beware of platitudinous ponderosity. Let your conversational communications possess a clarified conciseness, a compact comprehensibleness, coalescent consistency, and a concatenated cogency. Eschew all conglomerations of flatulent garrulity, jejune babblement and asinine affectations. Let your extemporaneous descantings and unpremeditated expatiations have intelligibility and veracious vivacity, without rhodomontade or thrasonical bombast. Sedulously avoid all polysyllabic profundity, pompous prolixity, psittaceous vacuity, ventriloquial verbosity and vaniloquent vapidity. Shun double-entendres, purient pscosity, and pestiferous profanity, obscurant or apparent.”
cuzinron47 over 6 years ago
Sorry for the reality, but that’s got to be confusing to dogs, as Sophie has noted.
ajakimber425 over 6 years ago
Then don’t speak the next time.
ellisaana Premium Member over 6 years ago
We trained our first Sheltie (Bennie) to sneeze on command. He had also had learned ‘sit.’ The greatest party gag of all was when my husband (very drunk & showing off,) asked Bennie to “sit down and sneeze.” He did both.