A
Almond eye:  eye shape in which the tissue surrounding
the eye is elongated
Amble:  a relaxed, easy trot in between the walk and the
show ring gait
Angulation:  the angles formed at the meeting joint of two
bones
Anterior:  the portion carried foremost in normal
locomotion
Apple head:  a domed or rounded top skull
Apron:  the longer fur and the chest and lower neck

B
Balance:  term used to describe the similar
characteristics of the dog's parts--porportions
Bandy leg:  a leg that bends outward in an arch
Barrel chested: describes overly-sprung ribs--a very
rounded rib cage
Basewide:  wide footfall in gaiting
Bat ear:  an erect/prick ear with a broad base and
rounded top
Beard:  long hair on the under jaw
Beefy:  over development of the hindquarter muscling
Bitchy:  usually used to define an overly-refined male
Bite:  the position of the jaws and all teeth when the
mouth is closed
Blanket:  the coloring on the back and upper sides of the
dog between the neck and the tail
Blocky:  squarish in body
Bloom: the sheen of a healthy coat
Bodied up: mature looking, well-developed, lacking
puppyish conformational characteristic
Bone:  pertaining to the substance and girth of the dog's
bones, usually refering to leg bones
Bossy: overdeveloped shoulder muscles (equivalent of
beefy, only in the front)
Brindle: another coloration pattern, broken tiger striped
Brisket: thoraxic area (inc. chest, rib cage)
Broken coat: a roungh but sparse wire coat
Brush: the featering on the underside of the tail
Bull neck: a thick, stout, well muscled neck
Button ear: an ear type in which the base of the ears is
erect, but the top tips neatly foreward

C
Camel back:  general term used to describe an arched
back
Carpal:  argest bone in the pastern (wrist)
Cat foot:  describes a tight-knuckled foot in which the
toes are well arched
Caudal/coccygeal:  the vertabrae that make up the tail
Cervical vertabrae:  the vertabrae that make up the neck
Cheeky:  too much fiil in the skull cavities, bulging sides
of face
China eye:  blue or clear eye coloration
Chiseling:  pertaining to head structure, the outline and
smoothness of the facial region
Chops:  jowls, thick, heavy flesh on the lips and jaws
Clipping:  a gaiting fault in which the rear feet actually
knick the pads of the front feet when in a full trot
Close-coupled:  a short loin in comparison to other
proportions
Coarse:  lacking refinement
Cobby:  very compact all over
Conformation: term describing the physical structure of
the entire dog
Coupling: the loin
Cow-hocked: hocks bending inwards when in a natural
stance
Crabbing: gaiting fault in which the front and rear legs do
not line up when viewed from behind or in front
Crest: the arch on the top of the neck in some breeds
Cropped ear:  an ear that had been surgically altered or
trimmed to stand up erect
Croup:  the region on the top of the dog between the hip
bones, extending to were the tail is set on

D
Dentition:  the number and placement of teeth in the
mouth
Depth (of chest):  an indication of the volume of internal
room for the heart, lungs, etc--referenced to the elbow
Dewclaws:  extra toe or toes on the inside of the
pasterns or hocks (commonly removed in most breeds
Dewlap:  loose hanging skin under the neck
Dish face:  a concave top of muzzle or slightly upturned
nose
Divergent hocks:  hocks that turn outward when at a
natural stance
Dock tail:  a tail that has been surgically shortened or
removed
Double coat:  a two layered type of coat, the first thick and
plush, the outer one consisting of coarser guard hairs
Down face:  pertaining to the planing of the head, the
slope of the muzzle plane being steeper than that of the
skull plane
Down in the pastern:  weak pasterns
Drive:  reffering to the amount of  thrust from the rear
when gaiting
Drop ear:  an ear folded or creases in at least one place
Dry neck:  taut skin on the underline of the neck
(opposite of wet neck)
Dudley nose:  flesh colored nose leather  

E
East-west:  front structural fault in which the legs and feet
point outwards, away from each other
Elbow in: in at elbows: elbows turn inward, towards body,
at a natural stance
Elbowing out:  the elbows turned out, away from body
Even bite:  meeting of upper and lower incisors with no
overlap
Ewe neck:  a concave neck line
Expression:  general appearance of the look in the eye
Eyeteeth:  upper canine teeth

F
Feathering:  fringe of hair on the underside of the tail,
brisket, and backs of legs
Femur:  main bone in the rear legs
Fibula:  one of the bones that make up the lower thigh
Fiddle front:  elbows turned outward, pasterns turned
inward, toes pointed outward
Flag:  a long feathered tail, carried high
Flat croup:  a croup with insufficient slope or taper from
the hip bones to the root of the tail
Flat sided:  lacking proper spring of ribs
Flews: inner corners of the upper lips
Flewsy:  too much flews
Flying ears:  erect/prick ears on a breed that should not
have prick ears
Flying trot:  a very fast gait where all four feet are off the
ground for a brief moment
French front:  see "fiddle front"
Frill:  see "apron"
Full dentition:  refers to an adult dog with all its teeth in
and fully developed
Furnishings:  see "feathering"  

G
Gait:  the pattern of footfall when used in a show ring
setting, it describes the dog's movement at a trot
Gaskin:  lower second thigh
Gay tail: a tail carried high and slightly curved over the
back
Goose neck:  a long tube-like neck (opposite of bull neck)
Goose stepping:  a gaiting fault with an accentuated and
seemingly careless lift in the forelegs
Grizzle:  a mixture of three or more colors on one hair
Guard hairs:  the coarse outer coat on a double coated
breed  

H
Hackles:  hairs on the back and the back of the neck that
the dog raises when alerted
Hackney gait:  a fault in all but two AKC recognized
breeds in which the front legs are lifted high with an
arching wrist
Hard knuckled:  a tight foot with prominent arches in
each of the toes
Hare foot:  an elongated foot with little arch in the toes
Harlequin:  color pattern usually piebald (bi-color
splashes)
Haw:  the third eyelid; membrane on the inner corner of
the eye, seen in wet faced breeds
Height:  measured from the ground to the point of the
withers
Hock: the collection of tarses bones on the rear legs
Hocking out:  see "divergent hocks"  
Humerus:  bone of the upper arm  

I
Incisors:  the smaller row of teeth between the two
canines; present on both upper and lower jaws  

J
Jowls:  flesh of the lips and jaws

K
Kiss marks:  tan spots on the cheeks and over the eyes
in some breeds
Kiss of Ala:  a small snip of differing color on the center
of the top of the skull
Knuckling over:  a universal fault where the carpal (wrist)
bones flex forward under the weight of the dogs standing  

L
Lay back:  term used to describe the dog's front or rear
angulation
Lay on:  the angle of the shoulder blade from the nearest
vertical axis
Leather:  outer flap of the ear
Level bite:  see "even bite"
Level gait:  no rise or fall of the withers or top line when
at a standard show ring gait
Liver:  a color; deep brown
Loaded:  pertaining to over-developement of certain
groups of muscles
Loin:  sides of the dog in the lumbar vertabral region
Loose front:  loose attachment of muscles to the
shoulder, producing a gait in which the front is slung all
about
Lumbar vertabrae:  the vertabrae between thoracic (over
ribs) and coccygeal (tail)
Lumber:  an awkward, uncoordinated looking gait  
M
Mandible:  lower jaw bone
Manubrium:  frontal area of the chest
Mask:  dark shading on the face
Merle:  color pattern; dark patching upon a lighter
background, as seen in some breeds like Australiian
Shepherds
Metatarsus:  smaller bone that makes up the hock
Milk teeth:  puppy teeth
Mismark:  a specimen with highly undesirable coloring or
markings for its breed
Moving close:  when viewed from the rear or front, the legs
move toward the centerline of the body while gaiting
Moving straight:  describes a dog with little reach and drive
in gaiting
Muzzle:  foreface; head in front of the eyes  

N

O
Oblique eyes:  outer corner of eyes placed higher than inner
corners
Occiput:  point of the skull bone, back of head
Otter tail:  thick rooted, tapering tail with parted hair on the
underside
Overdone: refers to a dog whose angulation is extreme; too
much
Overhang:  a heavily pronounced brow
Overreaching:  a gaiting fault in which the rear legs must
reach to one side or another to avoid clipping
Overshot:  an overbite; upper incisors project beyond the
lower ones  

P
Padding:  a gaiting fault in which the front feet flip up and
outward to avoid clipping with the rear
Paddling:  caused by and east-west or in at the elbows
front; front feet are slung stiffly outwards when gaiting
Pads:  the thick leathery projections on the soles of the feet
Paper foot:  an overly flat foot with thin pads and little, if any
arch to the toes
Peak:  see "occiput"
Parti:  varigated patches of two or more colors
Pastern:  region of the front leg between the carpus and the
foot (the wrist)
Pelvis:  hip bones
Penciling:  thin lines of black between otherwise tan colored
toes in some breeds
Pigeon toed:  feet (front or rear) pointing inwards, towards
each other
Pig mouth:  see "overshot"
Pincer bite:  see "even bite"
Planes:  referring to the head, the plane of the muzzle and
the plane of the top skull
Planing:  the comparison of the angles of the two planes of
the head
Plume:  see "feathering"
Poke:  neck carried low and outwards when gaiting
Popping hock:  gaiting fault describing an accentuated lift of
the hock portion just after full extension of the rear
Pounding:  gaiting fault;  front stride is shorter than the rear,
front feet pound the ground in an ungainly manner
Prick ear:  an erect or upright ear
Puppyish:  immature in overall conformation (ie no spring of
ribs, or loose front action; typical traits of puppies)

Q

R
Racy:  tall and of a lithe, slight build
Ragged:  muscling appears rough and ragged, instead of
smooth
Rangy: disproportionately tall, long, and of a lighter build
than is desired
Rat tail:  thick root covered in curly hair, tapering to a sharp
point w/ little to no hair
Reach:  descripes the length of forward stride taken by the
forelegs when in motion
Refinement:  pertaining to the amount of raciness
Restricted:  a gaiting fault caused by underangulation
where either the front or the rear appears painfully
constricted
Ribbed up:  a long rib cage
Ring tail:  carried up and in a semi-circle over the croup
Roach back:  a noticeable arch over the thoracic and
lumbar regions
Rocking horse:  refers to a dog who braces (or rock
backwards) while in a stack rather than lean over its front
Rolling:  a gait in which the rear seems to be swaying and
ambling along
Roman nose:  a down faced dog with the addition of a
further sloping tip of nose plane
Rubber hocks:  a gaiting fault in which the hocks flex and
twist both ways to bear the weight of the rear
Rudder:  another term for the tail
Ruff:  the thick,  lush hair growth around the neck in some
breeds  

S
Saber tail:  tail carried in a semi-circle
Sable:  color pattern; silver, gold, tawny, or grey hairs tipped
in black
Sacrum:  vertabrae of the pelvic girdle
Saddle:  large black marking over the back
Scissors bite:  a bite type; the outer surfaces of the lower
incisors touches the inner surfaces of the upper incisors
Screw tail:  a twisted, kinked tail
Self:  one solid color
Semi-prick ear:  ears carried erect with the tips leaning
forward
Shelly:  a shallow, narrow body lacking proper fill and spring
of ribs as well as being fine boned
Sickle hocks:  straight, restricted hock joints resulting in
inability to full straighted hocks while gaiting
Sickle tail:  carried out an in a semi-circle
Single tracking:  all footprints falling upon a single, central
line of travel while gaiting
Skully:  a very broad top skull
Slab sides:  flat, under sprung ribs
Slew foot:  general term for feet turned outwards
Smooth coat:  a very short, tight fitting and slick single layer
coat
Snipey:  a pointed muzzle lacking proper fill and under jaw
Snow nose: partially unpigmented nose leather
Splay foot:  a flat foot with toes spread apart from each other
Spring:  refers to the amount of roundness to the rib cage
Spread:  the distance between the front legs
Standoff coat:  a heavy, somewhat long coat that stands out
from the body, rather than lying flat
Steep:  used to denote incorrect angles
Steep croup:  a croup which makes a dramatic slope from
the hip bones to the root of the tail
Stern:  another term for the tail
Sternum:  breastbone
Stifle:  kneecap
Stilted:  a gaiting style; very choppy with lots of up and down
bounce due to straight angulation
Stop:  the indentation between the eyes; the step up from
the muzzle plane to the skull plane
Straight front:  too little angulation in the front
Straight in the pastern:  not enough give in the pastern
area when in a natural stance
Substance:  pertaining the amount of bone
Sway back:  a noticeably concave top line  

T
Thoracic vertabrae:  the vertabrae that make up the spine
over the rib cage area
Throaty:  excess of loose skin under the neck
Thumb marks:  black splotches on the backs of the
pasterns
Tibia:  the smaller of the two major bones in the hock
Top line:  the horizontal made by the top of the withers
through the bottom of the croup
Tuck up:  the shallower depth of body beneath the loin area
Tulip ear: carried erect with only the edges turning forward
and in
Twisting hocks:  see "rubber hocks"
Type:  the characteristic physical qualities that distinguish
one breed from another
Typey:  a specimen with outstanding breed type

U
Ulna:  the smaller of two major bones in the forearm
Underline:  the contour of the underside of the brisket and
the abdominal floor
Undershot:  an under bite, opposite of overshot
Unsound:  a dog with one or more severe conformational or
health faults that would render it incapable of working

V
Varminty:  a keen and piercing expression  

W
Walleye:  a bluish eye
Webbed:  a thin but solid membrane between all toes
Weedy:  rangy and with insufficient amount of bone
Well let down:  having short hocks
Wet neck: see "throaty"
Wheel back:  see "roach back"
Whip tail:  a long, straight, evenly tapering, smooth coated
tail
Winging: a gaiting fault in which one or both front limbs twist
outward
Wirehair:  a coat of hard, crisp, somewhat kinked hairs
Withers:  the region between the neck and the back
Wry mouth:  a cross bite where the upper and lower jaws
do not line up  

X

Y

Z

copyright © 2000-present Vom Löwenherzig Rottweilers  • All rights reserved • ANY reproduction of any text, graphics, photos or  backgrounds
on this site is strictly prohibited. Vom Löwenherzig Rottweilers name is registered with the USRC & ARV.