dingo in A Sentence

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    Come on. Dingo was his name-o.

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    2

    Dingo was his name-o.

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    3

    And Dingo was his name oh!

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    4

    Is the Dingo really named Ernie?

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    5

    Dingoes are the Australian wild dogs.

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    6

    Dingoes are Australian wild dogs.

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    7

    Here, off-roaders may roam but the Dingo is king.

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    8

    But there is less agreement about the Dingoes' effect.

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    9

    Hey, I think I hear a Dingo eating your baby.

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    10

    I just can't forget what happened to that poor Dingo back there.

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    11

    The Dingo is a native Australian dog that actually originated from southern China anywhere between 4600 and 18,300 years ago.

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    12

    Living and hunting in packs, wolves are wild dogs that come from the same group as the Dingo and coyote.

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    13

    It is part of a group of animals called the wild dogs which also includes the Dingo and the coyote.

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    14

    Researchers debate why the Tasmanian tiger fared so poorly on continental Australia with the arrival of humans and Dingoes.

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    15

    In Australia, the Dingo, foxes, wedge-tailed eagles, hunting and local pups(especially) cause problems for graziers because they often destroy for fun.

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    16

    In Australia, the Dingo, foxes, wedge-tailed eagles, hunting and domestic dogs(especially) cause problems for graziers because they often kill for fun.

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    17

    Positive note: it is dubbed in Italian but in a simply horrible way, in full Dingo Picture style, you will have huge laughs.

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    18

    Australia is home to the longest fence in the world It is 5,614 km long, and was originally built to keep Dingoes away from fertile land.

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    19

    The cause of their disappearance from the mainland is unclear, but their decline seems to coincide with the expansion across the mainland of indigenous Australians and Dingoes.

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    20

    Since Dingoes and other dog-like creatures have less latitude in arm-hand movement, that helps explain why these animals hunt by pursuit and in packs, rather than in an ambush setting,

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    21

    What that means for the Dingo's role in the thylacine's disappearance from continental Australia is not clear, but it does show the animals, while similar in many respects, likely hunted differently.

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    22

    While Dingoes are seen as the main reason for the disappearance of devils from the mainland, another theory is that the increasing aridity of the mainland caused it, while the population in Tasmania has been largely unaffected as the climate remains cool and moist.

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    23

    However, whether it was direct hunting by people, competition with Dingoes, changes brought about by the increasing human population, who by 3000 years ago were using all habitat types across the continent, or a combination of all three, is unknown; devils had coexisted with Dingoes on the mainland for around 3000 years.

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    24

    It is well known among Latin scholars, taxonomists, evolutionary biologists, natural historians, dog buffs, and other people familiar with the vagaries of taxonomy that the genus, or family, Canis takes its name from the Latin word for dog, meaning that all members thereof are technically dogs,“whether called dogs or wolves or coyotes or jackals or Dingoes,” says Paul Errington in his book Of Wilderness and Wolves.

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