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Definition of Tibetan terrier
1. Noun. Breed of medium-sized terriers bred in Tibet resembling Old English sheepdogs with fluffy curled tails.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tibetan Terrier
Literary usage of Tibetan terrier
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Lhasa: An Account of the Country and People of Central Tibet and of the by Perceval Landon (1905)
"The typical tibetan terrier, a long-coated little fellow with a sharp nose, prick
ears, and, as a rule, black from muzzle to tail, we found but seldom in a ..."
2. Catalogue of the Specimens and Drawings of Mammalia and Birds of Nepal and by British Museum, Brian Houghton Hodgson (1846)
"Drawing of tibetan terrier, t. 70. r. Drawing of Tibetan Mastiff", five and four
clawed var. t. 71, copied t. 72. «; Drawing of skull of Tibetan Mastiff, t. ..."
3. Catalogue of the Specimens and Drawings of Mammalia and Birds of Nepal and by B. N. Hodgson (1846)
"Drawing of tibetan terrier, t. 70. r. Drawing of Tibetan Mastiff, five and four
clawed var. t. 71, copied t. 72. s. Drawing of skull of Tibetan Mastiff, t. ..."
4. The Opening of Tibet: An Account of Lhasa and the Country and People of by Perceval Landon, Herbert James Walton, William Frederick Travers O'Connor, Francis Edward Younghusband (1905)
"The typical tibetan terrier, a long-coated little fellow with a sharp nose, prick
ears, and, as a rule, black from muzzle to tail, we found but seldom in a ..."
5. Proceedings by Zoological Society of London (1868)
"... (Saca- lius indiens), the Cabul Greyhound (Cani* cabu/entis), the Tibetan
Terrier, Tibetan Mastiff (with four and five claws), ..."