shaaark 10,694 Posted Tuesday at 20:56 Report Share Posted Tuesday at 20:56 Turd, snowy. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
THE STIFFMEISTER 15,690 Posted Tuesday at 22:45 Report Share Posted Tuesday at 22:45 Bayou and gator but if your wanting British flint and clay 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
comanche 2,935 Posted Wednesday at 07:33 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 07:33 (edited) 21 hours ago, Rickshaw swami said: Had some pups whelped a few days ago.My daughters have usually helped me name pups.Since they ain't around to help with pups anymore I decided to let yall give them proper British names.I dont like tough names for terriers not human names.The mother to the pups is named Moose.The sire is Jack rabbit. Brown one is a dog.Im thinking Muntjac,Shitehawk etc. Black ens a bitch.Thinking gollywog etc. Yall have fun with it and give me some other ideas please and thanks. Pity you don't want human names. George would be great name for a brown terrier and is very English. It also means "digger in soil". And Digger is a very common traditional name for a terrier. A friend had a terrier called Todger (see an online dictionary); in polite company he pronounced it Badger . Not a bad name for a terrier in itself. If you're considering Shite hawk how about Dickhead ,maybe Wanker( a good old term of British endearment, ahem) ,though they would carry certain risks. Imagine you are shouting the dog's name in public and some big bloke takes offence! Edited Wednesday at 13:37 by comanche 1 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Neal 1,857 Posted Wednesday at 09:48 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 09:48 One of my previous dogs earned the nickname Dickhead. When my young daughter overheard me calling him this she asked what dick meant. To this day I'm proud of how quickly I responded by telling her that, as he was a sheepdog, and sheep are counted differently (yan, tan, tethera etc) and he was my tenth dog...hence dick! 3 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Arry 21,389 Posted Wednesday at 14:08 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 14:08 20 hours ago, eastcoast said: If you're looking for names with a British connection then some of our rivers have good terrier names. Tyne, Tweed, Clyde, Dart, Dee etc. There's loads of them. I like having the name of river a lot especially Dart as I like on the side of it so bias. I think Teigh would be another good name of corse bias again. Cheers Arry 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackthelad 1,893 Posted Wednesday at 14:27 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 14:27 Nae baws an hairy baws….. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Bostock 123 Posted Wednesday at 14:55 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 14:55 Chance and gamble 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Qbgrey 4,068 Posted Wednesday at 16:38 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 16:38 (edited) Dash, Dodge, dart (as mentioned) , vinny ,trigger Edited Wednesday at 16:39 by Qbgrey 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
comanche 2,935 Posted Wednesday at 18:09 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 18:09 (edited) 10 hours ago, Neal said: One of my previous dogs earned the nickname Dickhead. When my young daughter overheard me calling him this she asked what dick meant. To this day I'm proud of how quickly I responded by telling her that, as he was a sheepdog, and sheep are counted differently (yan, tan, tethera etc) and he was my tenth dog...hence dick! Sadly reached his sell by date a month ago but my last lurcher was called Murkyn ; pronounced "merkin" as in the Old English word . Most people just thought it a weird name for a dog . Those that knew struggled to hide their giggles. . Jackie Drakeford laughed so much l thought she was going to explode ! Edited Wednesday at 20:20 by comanche 1 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
AntB 2 Posted Wednesday at 19:07 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 19:07 Rupert and Digby 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Big rowie 187 Posted Wednesday at 19:17 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 19:17 For dog loon and for bitch quine. But my kids pic names for the dogs and ferrets 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
chartpolski 23,116 Posted Wednesday at 19:34 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 19:34 I went through a phase of naming my dogs from the NATO alphabet; Delta, Lima, Tango , Echo, Kilo. Cheers. 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
eastcoast 4,110 Posted Wednesday at 19:51 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 19:51 20 hours ago, THE STIFFMEISTER said: Bayou and gator but if your wanting British flint and clay One of the 1st terriers that I seen worked was a dog called Flint. Long backed, bent legged Sealyham type that was taller at the back than at the front with a head like the proverbial bucket. Beautiful to my eye at the time. Well named but chosen not as a poetic connotation to hard microcrystalline quart but after the character that James Coburn played in a film that was often on the TV. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
THE STIFFMEISTER 15,690 Posted Wednesday at 20:07 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 20:07 32 minutes ago, chartpolski said: I went through a phase of naming my dogs from the NATO alphabet; Delta, Lima, Tango , Echo, Kilo. Cheers. Whiskey tango foxtrot Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Borr 5,783 Posted Wednesday at 20:10 Report Share Posted Wednesday at 20:10 3 minutes ago, THE STIFFMEISTER said: Whiskey tango foxtrot Wtf 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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