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house-trained

ADJECTIVE
  1. (of pets) trained to urinate and defecate outside or in a special place
    housebroken pets
    `house-trained' is chiefly British

How To Use house-trained In A Sentence

  • However, there's also the sad fact that many conductors, especially those barely house-trained, are very bad at it.
  • An early visitor was Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia, accompanied not by his customary pet, a lion, but by ‘an ill-tempered and unhouse-trained dog’.
  • What is more, Shar-Peis are bright and affectionate and their advantages of being easily house-trained, exceptionally clean and needing minimal grooming make them ideal for indoor living.
  • He is house-trained; he never makes a mess; he is obedient; he is a pure delight to me.
  • Goodness me, if they were puppies, within a day they would be asking to go outside - they are so good at being house-trained.
  • All the canine emigrants have been vaccinated, checked for health problems and house-trained.
  • She was house-trained from the moment we got her, even though she spent her first few weeks of life in a barn.
  • But it as well to remember that the defence secretary is about as house-trained as a caged puma with an itch.
  • I think it is amazing how quickly members of the National Party get house-trained.
  • By last Thursday though, he needed to get out, as Butch the Staffordshire Bull terrier needed the toilet, and was so well house-trained he wouldn't go in the flat.
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