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2006-11-28 11:36:44 · 16 answers · asked by Dava 4 in Education & Reference Trivia

16 answers

Interesting that you should ask....Jacques Cousteau had made some very interesting observations on the subject. He noted that dogfish do indeed wag their tails when happy. More interesting tho was the fact that catfish purr when pleased and sea horses jumped for joy. Star fish glow at the thought of a visit from you, and on occasion a clam will show his mussels with pride.

If there's one thing I know, Cousteau otter know his fishes.

2006-11-28 11:51:17 · answer #1 · answered by Canadian Ken 6 · 2 0

No. The tail moves to propel the fish. You can tell when the dogfish is happy because he will chase his tail or fetch small items.

2006-11-28 11:42:27 · answer #2 · answered by maddojo 6 · 0 0

Yes the old sea dog's quite friendly. But don't go near them when they're hungry as they may cuttle your fingers off with a shark bite. They're not very good with seal pups, infact one owner had to cast his dogfish Fido off to Batter Sea Dog's home. He has a new owner now, Dr Octopus who is an Octogenarian and is teaching him how to do new crabsticks and jump through ropes.

2006-11-29 00:29:38 · answer #3 · answered by brainlady 6 · 0 0

cats have a somewhat elementary to understand "physique language' Your sister is closer to being actual. A cat it is wagging its tail like a satisfied canine is probable very annoyed. (it is somewhat extra advantageous of a thrashing stream) element is, you besides to mght could desire to observe the ears. mutually as a cat is satisfied it is tail is frequently surprising down lose and mushy, or held extreme and mushy and oftentimes nonetheless. it is ears are up in a neuteral place. in the event that they're perked way up or grew to alter into in a different direction, it is in all probability listening to some element. If a cat is annoyed it is ears oftentimes lie flat on the back of their head, they often thrash their tail backward and forward, which, as I mentioned, can seem such as a canine wagging its tail for excitement. a much less "whiplash" and bigger "mushy" sort of tail "wagging" can characterize playfulness. if a cat is low to the floor and it is ears are each and each pointed somewhat flat to the area (dealing with opposite factors), it is demanding.

2016-12-29 15:29:17 · answer #4 · answered by valaria 4 · 0 0

The dog need to smoke crack to tell that it is happy.

Alright,i'm just kidding.....basically it will wag its tail or spin around.

2006-11-28 14:53:34 · answer #5 · answered by hidayat 2 · 0 0

no it wags its tail when its sad not happy
why......... cause its a dogfish

2006-11-28 11:52:28 · answer #6 · answered by clint c 3 · 0 0

yes it does. anytime a fish is swimming it wags its tail, and everytime a fish is swimming it's happy.

2006-11-28 11:39:07 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes: I saw one bury a bone the other day!!!
Then cocked it's fin, and pissed up a water lilly!!!

2006-11-28 13:42:29 · answer #8 · answered by The LIZARD of OG 2 · 1 0

no, and a catfish doesn't spit when it's angry, or a jellyfish wobble, a trumpetfish play glenn Milleror a parrotfish say "who's a pretty boy then."

2006-11-28 11:49:21 · answer #9 · answered by Quizard 7 · 0 0

Absolutely....and catfish purr when they're happy...(ya gotta put your ear in the water to hear it though...try it!)

2006-11-28 11:48:54 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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