Canine in movies
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 40 answers to crossword clue "Canine in movies"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
ASTACanine in movies.
TOTOCanine in Oz
SHOWDOGCanine in competitions
ARFCanine comment, in cartoons
OTTOComics canine in fatigues
ADALetters in canine care
TEETHEDBroke in a canine?
TOTOCanine in "Oz" books.
SNOOPYCanine in the comics.
SNERTCanine in the comics
ODIECanine in the comics
BEST... in show (canine award)
ORALBBig name in canine care
ODIEDrooling canine in the funnies
RINFirst name in canine stars
DDSOne involved in canine care (abbr.)
ARFSCanine palaver in the comic strips.
RABCanine in Dr. John Brown's story.
BENJITitle canine in a 1974 film
FOXIDENTALCanine that lives in the West?
SNERTComics canine in a Viking helmet
eyetoothcanine tooth in the upper jaw
eyeteethcanine tooth in the upper jaw
DOGBITECanine event, in more ways than one
SPOTCanine in "Fun with Dick and Jane"
FALACanine appearing in "The Winds of War"
CUJOTitle canine in a Stephen King book
cuspidsone of the canine teeth in humans
cuspidone of the canine teeth in humans
TIMMYBoy with a canine pal, in 50's TV
OTTERLead-in to hound, in the canine world
SNOOPYWWI canine ace if only in his dreams
STAYCanine command usually spoken slowly in a low voice
CHOWBELLABlue-tongued dog in the canine version of the "Twilight" series?
GRRCanine warning that the answers to starred clues have in common, initially
BINGOName spelled out in a canine song, and also by the starts of the answers to starred clues
parvovirusesAny of a class of very small viruses chiefly affecting animals, esp. one (canine parvovirus) that causes contagious disease in dogs
premolarsA tooth situated between the canine and the molar teeth. An adult human normally has eight, two in each jaw on each side
choreoiddisease of the central nervous system caused by bacterial or organic degeneration, most common in dogs following canine distemper, characterized by irregular, jerky, involuntary muscular movements
choreasdisease of the central nervous system caused by bacterial or organic degeneration, most common in dogs following canine distemper, characterized by irregular, jerky, involuntary muscular movements