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Sexually Disabled

Sexually Disabled

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LOOK AT WHAT I HAVE JUST DONE TO YOU!!! WAKE UP @btsgangruling I HAVE JUST SQUIRTED MY SEMEN ON TOP OF YOUR FOREHEAD!

YOU ARE MY INDIAN CUM SLAVE. HOW WILL YOU RECOVER NOW? I HAVE JUST COMPLETELY SUBJUGAGTED INDIA WITH MY BIG PAKI PENIS! I BROKE MY 300 DAY NO FAP STREAK FOR THIS PICTURE AND IT WAS TOTALLY WORTH IT. HOW DARE YOU INSULT PAKISTAN @btsrulinggang MORE INDIANS MUST SUFFER! MY SEMEN WILL TRESPASS ON THE FACES OF EVEN MORE INDIANS BECAUSE OF YOU @btsgangruling YOU HAVE REALLY GONE AND DONE IT! YOU HAVE REALISED PANDORAS BOX( MY TESTICLES) ONTO YOUR FELLOW INDIANS, NIGGA! @btsrulinggang YOU INDIAN FACE IS SO SUBMISSIVE MY BPC(BIG PAKISTANO CARK) IS STILL HARD AS I AM TYPING THIS, IN FACT I MIGHT SUCH REALISE ANOTHER LOAD ONTO YOUR FACE! PREPARE YOURSELF I WILL STRIKE WHEN YOU LEAST EXPECT IT!

I GONNA RAPE YOUR ASS SO HARD AND MAKE YOU SCREAM PAKISTAN ZINDABAD UNTIL YOUR BLEEDING OUT OF YOUR EARS.

 
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love it
 
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@Thompsonz do this @inferiorpispot234
 
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whats wrong with your cum man why is it so streaky
 
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Imagine being on 300 days nofap and having a tiddlywink drop of dessicated oil as a result

prison break ok im gonna go watch 1x05 now GIF
 
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✨RENT-FREE✨
also your cum kinda weird ngl drink some water bhai
 
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IN(Dian) Feminine Pajeet
He gotta be pakistani bruh every pakistani "male" has bitch tits and small dick while every indian superhuman god male has 12 incher flaccid 6'5 300 lb and ultra giga dimorphic face
 
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dogs don't pay rent! :feelsree:
dog? Whos the abused dog here?
This nigga dedicated his kids to me
I raped you mentally ill fucking autistic sperglit. With no muscle and horrible body acne I made you my bitch and cucked and pegged ur tired no stamina asshole like the faggot you are. You literally had to recover for 5 hours because I donkey fucked you without lube continuously. I out mogged and outsaninad your sad cucked, mentally weak existence you faggot. You submitted to me. Now bark faggot
 
You're my little piss slurper I own you and your low t fragile Twink bones.


I'd make you drink my piss and gargle my dick cheese and eat it off of crackers you ugly maggot infested inbred mutt. :lul::lul: your people are getting raped en mass by robust indians. Gonna cry faggot? Nothing you can do about it either
 
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dog? Whos the abused dog here?
This nigga dedicated his kids to me
I raped you mentally ill fucking autistic sperglit. With no muscle and horrible body acne I made you my bitch and cucked and pegged ur tired no stamina asshole like the faggot you are. You literally had to recover for 5 hours because I donkey fucked you without lube continuously. I out mogged and outsaninad your sad cucked, mentally weak existence you faggot. You submitted to me. Now bark faggot
YOU ARE MY WIFE! SHUT UP WIFE.
 
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You're my little piss slurper I own you and your low t fragile Twink bones.


I'd make you drink my piss and gargle my dick cheese and eat it off of crackers you ugly maggot infested inbred mutt. :lul::lul: your people are getting raped en mass by robust indians. Gonna cry faggot? Nothing you can do about it either

Indian pariah dog​

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Jump to navigationJump to search
Indian pariah dog
The Indian Pariah Dog.jpg
Common nicknamesSouth Asian pariah dog[1]
Pye-dog[2]
INDog[3]
Desi dog[4]
OriginIndian subcontinent[5]
hideTraits
HeightDogs20–25 in (51–64 cm)
Bitches18–23 in (46–58 cm)
WeightDogs20–30 kg (44–66 lb)
Bitches15–25 kg (33–55 lb)
CoatShort
Coloursolid fawn, pied (fawn/black & white), black (rare)
Life span10-13 years
hideKennel club standards
Kennel Club of Indiastandard
Dog (domestic dog)
The Indian pariah dog, also known as the Indian native dog or INDog,[6][7] South Asian pye dog and Desi Dog,[4][6] is a landrace of dog native to the Indian subcontinent.[5] They have erect ears, a wedge-shaped head, and a curved tail. It is easily trainable and often used as a guard dog and police dog.[8][9] This dog is an example of an ancient group of dogs known as pye-dogs. It is possible that the ancestry of this dog dates back 4,500 years.[10]
Though most street dogs in the Indian subcontinent are in fact Indian pye-dogs, the names for this breed are often erroneously used to refer to all urban South Asian stray dogs despite the fact that some free-ranging dogs in the Indian subcontinent do not match the "pariah type" and may not be pure indigenous dogs but mixed breeds,[2][11] especially around locations where European colonists historically settled in India, due to admixtures with European dog breeds.[12][13]

Contents​

Appearance[edit]​

It is a medium-sized dog of square to slightly rectangular build and short coat. The dog has a double coat, a coarse upper coat, and a soft undercoat. The most commonly observed colours are browns, ranging from dark to reddish-brown, with or without white markings. Solid blacks are rare, but some dogs are pied. Shaded coats, brindles, solid white and dalmatian-type spotting are never seen in pure populations. These may be a sign of mixing with modern breeds, as they are only seen in dogs in cities and other sites where non-native dogs have been introduced.[14]
The head is medium-sized and wedge-shaped. The muzzle is pointed and is of equal or slightly greater length than the head. The neck is noble and the forequarters are erect. Hindquarters are minimally angled. The trot is short. The eyes are almond-shaped and dark brown in colour. The ears are held erect and are pointed at the tips, with a broad base, set low on the head, and the tail is curled and held high when excited.

Names[edit]​


Indian pye-dogs have been used as guard dogs for centuries.
The namesake of this breed was given during the British Raj in India after the Pariah tribe of the Madras Presidency.[15] From the Anglo-Indian word pye or paë and Hindi pāhī meaning 'outsider', the Indian pariah dog is sometimes referred to as the pye-dog (also spelt pie or pi) and the Indian native dog.[16] It is popularly known as Desi Kutta or Desi Dog (which derives from the Hindi-Urdu word desi, meaning native), as well as the Indi-dog or In-dog (in various spellings).[4][17] It was referred to in the works of Rudyard Kipling as the "yellow pariah dog".[18]

Indian pariah dog -'Shanu' in village Ghel, District Fatehgarh Sahib, Punjab

History[edit]​


A pet Indian pariah dog in Raigarh
The pariah dog of India is an ancient autochthonous landrace that is found all over India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and even beyond South Asia.[5][better source needed][19][page needed] A pariah-like dog skull was discovered in the ancient Indian site of Mohenjo-daro and prehistoric rock art depicting a dog of similar type has been found in the Bhimbetka rock shelters.[4][better source needed] It was featured on National Geographic Channel's film, Search for the First Dog along with the other ancient types such as the Canaan Dog of Israel and the Australian dingo.[4]
The Indian pye-dog was introduced to the Andaman Islands with the establishment of a penal colony there, dogs having been previously unknown to the native Andamanese.[20]
Despite the Indian pariah dog being highly intelligent and easily trainable, the breed was intentionally downplayed during the British Raj by merchants who wished to sell their foreign breeds within the country.[21] Their popularity in the West in recent years, however, has resulted in hundreds of dogs being exported out of the Indian subcontinent.[22]
In 2015, a breed standard was published in the Indian Kennel Gazette, the publication of Kennel Club of India,[6] and the dog has been recognized by the Primitive and Aboriginal Dog Society (PADS), a worldwide grouping of enthusiasts based in the US.[10]
Some in the society view these dogs as a risk citing their increasing population in India in recent years. They consider these dogs as menace and nuisance owing to constant barking and biting people. Nevertheless, most of these attacks are caused due to human provocation like hitting them with sticks or throwing stones at them.[23] The numbers of dog bites and deaths due to dog attacks are increasing every year. Since these dogs are largely not vaccinated, they frequently carry rabies.[24]
Indian Pariah dogs make for loving family pets and are great with kids and adults. They are high on energy and complement kids with an active lifestyle. Indian pariah dogs are one of the oldest dog breeds in existence today. Archaeological findings indicate that this dog was in existence some 4500 years ago. Excavations in the Mohenjo-Daro site found in the Sindh region of Pakistan (Indus Valley civilisation) revealed an Indian Pariah dog skull dating to 2500 BCE. Also, there are various cave paintings across the Indian subcontinent that hints at pariah dogs to be one of the oldest dog breeds in the world.[25]

Temperament[edit]​

Pariah dogs are very alert and social.[10] They are used as guard dogs and police dogs, being very territorial and defensive.[8][9] They need good socializing as pups and do well with families and children if provided with such socialization.[22] They are highly intelligent and easily trainable; to this end, veterinarian Premlata Choudhary stated that "desi dogs are much more intelligent and hardy than most pedigreed dogs that people spend so much money on."[22]

Health[edit]​

Being a naturally evolved breed, they have very few health concerns and thrive with minimal maintenance in suitable climates.[9] The skin needs very little grooming and the dogs themselves are relatively clean.[9] They have little body odour.[4][9] Genetic health ailments like hip dysplasia are extremely rare, since there is no inbreeding and the dominant genes that aid their survival are naturally selected over time.[9] Most of their deaths occur due to accidents on the roads and railway tracks, starvation, drinking polluted water, tumors in the body, snakebites, or harm from humans.[26]

See also[edit]​

References[edit]​

  1. ^ van Asch, B.; Zhang, A.-b.; Oskarsson, M. C. R.; Klutsch, C. F. C.; Amorim, A.; Savolainen, P. (10 July 2013). "Pre-Columbian origins of Native American dog breeds, with only limited replacement by European dogs, confirmed by mtDNA analysis". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 280 (1766): 20131142. doi:10.1098/rspb.2013.1142. PMC 3730590. PMID 23843389.
  2. ^ Jump up to:a b Vellampalli, Jaya (13 January 2018). "Why the Indian Pariah is a perfect pet". Telangana Today. Retrieved 12 April 2019. Indian Pariah dog also known as the Pye Dog is a perfect pet. There is always some confusion when it comes to this specific dog breed. Most of us assume every street dog to be Pariah. But not all of them belong to this breed. Many strays are mixed breeds, often referred to as mongrels, and cannot be considered pure Pariah dogs.
  3. ^ "INDog-Primitive and Aboriginal Dogs Society".
  4. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Choudhury-Mahajan, Lina (12 July 2011). "Paws for thought". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  5. ^ Jump up to:a b c Vellampalli, Jaya (13 January 2018). "Why the Indian Pariah is a perfect pet". Telangana Today.
  6. ^ Jump up to:a b c "Article on the Indian Native Dog in the Kennel Gazette, Kennel Club of India, July 2015 – INDog Project".
  7. ^ "Primitive and Aboriginal Dogs Society, INDog".
  8. ^ Jump up to:a b Mukherjee Pandey, Jhimli (5 March 2019). "Rescued pup trains her way into elite dog squad". Times of India. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  9. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Vellampalli, Jaya (13 January 2018). "Why the Indian Pariah is a perfect pet". Telangana Today. Retrieved 12 April 2019. They are commonly seen in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan. They adjust well in tropical climates as there is a mix of both winters and summers. But, even extreme weather conditions do not affect them in any way. This breed of dog sheds little fur. As they have short coat, the need for regular brushing and combing is less. They don’t even need regular bath as they do not have an unpleasant body odour. ... They are very devoted to their family/owners. In rural areas, these dogs are seen guarding farm animals. ... These dogs are free from all genetic health problems as they are a natural breed.
  10. ^ Jump up to:a b c "INDog, The Indian Pariah Dog Project". October 2010.
  11. ^ "Opening doors to what we call pariah". The Telegraph. 27 November 2005. Retrieved 12 April 2019. A pariah is a desi dog, while a stray is an ownerless dog and a mongrel is a mixed breed. In India, most strays are pariah dogs or mongrels.
  12. ^ Shannon, Laura M. (2015). "Genetic structure in village dogs reveals a Central Asian domestication origin". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (44): 13639–13644. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11213639S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1516215112. PMC 4640804. PMID 26483491.
  13. ^ "Dog conservation and the population genetic structure of dogs" (PDF).
  14. ^ "Indian breed dogs - Indian breed dogs - Indian street dog, dog breed lists". www.meramaal.com. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  15. ^ Chakrabarti, Pratik (June 2010). "Beasts of Burden: Animals and Laboratory Research in Colonial India". History of Science. 48 (2): 125–151. Bibcode:2010HisSc..48..125C. doi:10.1177/007327531004800201. PMC 2997667. PMID 20582325.
  16. ^ Merriam-Webster Dictionary
  17. ^ Purkayastha, Bandana (8 June 2005). Negotiating Ethnicity: Second-Generation South Asians Traverse a Transnational World. Rutgers University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-8135-3780-1. Desi is a Hindi/Urdu term for South Asian native
  18. ^ Kipling, Rudyard. (1894) The Jungle Book.
  19. ^ Pathak, Arun (1995). Handicrafts in the Indus Valley Civilization. Janaki Prakashan. ISBN 8185078874.
  20. ^ Cipriani, Lidio (1966). The Andaman Islanders. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 81.
  21. ^ Choudhury-Mahajan, Lina (12 July 2011). "Paws for thought". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  22. ^ Jump up to:a b c Sharma, Purnima (13 February 2017). "Desi stray dogs are finding loving homes thousands of miles away from the mean streets of India". Quartz. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  23. ^ "Are stray dogs a major problem in India?". 22 June 2018.
  24. ^ Harris, Gardiner (7 August 2012). "Where Streets Are Thronged with Strays Baring Fangs". The New York Times.
  25. ^ "Indian Pariah Dogs". 9 April 2020.
  26. ^ Pandey, Ashish (1 August 2021). "Over 300 dogs poisoned to death by Andhra village panchayat, alleges activist". India Today. India Today. Retrieved 11 October 2021.

External links[edit]​

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Dogs originating in India and Sri Lanka
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Indian pariah dog​

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Jump to navigationJump to search
Indian pariah dog
The Indian Pariah Dog.jpg
Common nicknamesSouth Asian pariah dog[1]
Pye-dog[2]
INDog[3]
Desi dog[4]
OriginIndian subcontinent[5]
hideTraits
HeightDogs20–25 in (51–64 cm)
Bitches18–23 in (46–58 cm)
WeightDogs20–30 kg (44–66 lb)
Bitches15–25 kg (33–55 lb)
CoatShort
Coloursolid fawn, pied (fawn/black & white), black (rare)
Life span10-13 years
hideKennel club standards
Kennel Club of Indiastandard
Dog (domestic dog)
The Indian pariah dog, also known as the Indian native dog or INDog,[6][7] South Asian pye dog and Desi Dog,[4][6] is a landrace of dog native to the Indian subcontinent.[5] They have erect ears, a wedge-shaped head, and a curved tail. It is easily trainable and often used as a guard dog and police dog.[8][9] This dog is an example of an ancient group of dogs known as pye-dogs. It is possible that the ancestry of this dog dates back 4,500 years.[10]
Though most street dogs in the Indian subcontinent are in fact Indian pye-dogs, the names for this breed are often erroneously used to refer to all urban South Asian stray dogs despite the fact that some free-ranging dogs in the Indian subcontinent do not match the "pariah type" and may not be pure indigenous dogs but mixed breeds,[2][11] especially around locations where European colonists historically settled in India, due to admixtures with European dog breeds.[12][13]

Contents​

Appearance[edit]​

It is a medium-sized dog of square to slightly rectangular build and short coat. The dog has a double coat, a coarse upper coat, and a soft undercoat. The most commonly observed colours are browns, ranging from dark to reddish-brown, with or without white markings. Solid blacks are rare, but some dogs are pied. Shaded coats, brindles, solid white and dalmatian-type spotting are never seen in pure populations. These may be a sign of mixing with modern breeds, as they are only seen in dogs in cities and other sites where non-native dogs have been introduced.[14]
The head is medium-sized and wedge-shaped. The muzzle is pointed and is of equal or slightly greater length than the head. The neck is noble and the forequarters are erect. Hindquarters are minimally angled. The trot is short. The eyes are almond-shaped and dark brown in colour. The ears are held erect and are pointed at the tips, with a broad base, set low on the head, and the tail is curled and held high when excited.

Names[edit]​


Indian pye-dogs have been used as guard dogs for centuries.
The namesake of this breed was given during the British Raj in India after the Pariah tribe of the Madras Presidency.[15] From the Anglo-Indian word pye or paë and Hindi pāhī meaning 'outsider', the Indian pariah dog is sometimes referred to as the pye-dog (also spelt pie or pi) and the Indian native dog.[16] It is popularly known as Desi Kutta or Desi Dog (which derives from the Hindi-Urdu word desi, meaning native), as well as the Indi-dog or In-dog (in various spellings).[4][17] It was referred to in the works of Rudyard Kipling as the "yellow pariah dog".[18]

Indian pariah dog -'Shanu' in village Ghel, District Fatehgarh Sahib, Punjab

History[edit]​


A pet Indian pariah dog in Raigarh
The pariah dog of India is an ancient autochthonous landrace that is found all over India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and even beyond South Asia.[5][better source needed][19][page needed] A pariah-like dog skull was discovered in the ancient Indian site of Mohenjo-daro and prehistoric rock art depicting a dog of similar type has been found in the Bhimbetka rock shelters.[4][better source needed] It was featured on National Geographic Channel's film, Search for the First Dog along with the other ancient types such as the Canaan Dog of Israel and the Australian dingo.[4]
The Indian pye-dog was introduced to the Andaman Islands with the establishment of a penal colony there, dogs having been previously unknown to the native Andamanese.[20]
Despite the Indian pariah dog being highly intelligent and easily trainable, the breed was intentionally downplayed during the British Raj by merchants who wished to sell their foreign breeds within the country.[21] Their popularity in the West in recent years, however, has resulted in hundreds of dogs being exported out of the Indian subcontinent.[22]
In 2015, a breed standard was published in the Indian Kennel Gazette, the publication of Kennel Club of India,[6] and the dog has been recognized by the Primitive and Aboriginal Dog Society (PADS), a worldwide grouping of enthusiasts based in the US.[10]
Some in the society view these dogs as a risk citing their increasing population in India in recent years. They consider these dogs as menace and nuisance owing to constant barking and biting people. Nevertheless, most of these attacks are caused due to human provocation like hitting them with sticks or throwing stones at them.[23] The numbers of dog bites and deaths due to dog attacks are increasing every year. Since these dogs are largely not vaccinated, they frequently carry rabies.[24]
Indian Pariah dogs make for loving family pets and are great with kids and adults. They are high on energy and complement kids with an active lifestyle. Indian pariah dogs are one of the oldest dog breeds in existence today. Archaeological findings indicate that this dog was in existence some 4500 years ago. Excavations in the Mohenjo-Daro site found in the Sindh region of Pakistan (Indus Valley civilisation) revealed an Indian Pariah dog skull dating to 2500 BCE. Also, there are various cave paintings across the Indian subcontinent that hints at pariah dogs to be one of the oldest dog breeds in the world.[25]

Temperament[edit]​

Pariah dogs are very alert and social.[10] They are used as guard dogs and police dogs, being very territorial and defensive.[8][9] They need good socializing as pups and do well with families and children if provided with such socialization.[22] They are highly intelligent and easily trainable; to this end, veterinarian Premlata Choudhary stated that "desi dogs are much more intelligent and hardy than most pedigreed dogs that people spend so much money on."[22]

Health[edit]​

Being a naturally evolved breed, they have very few health concerns and thrive with minimal maintenance in suitable climates.[9] The skin needs very little grooming and the dogs themselves are relatively clean.[9] They have little body odour.[4][9] Genetic health ailments like hip dysplasia are extremely rare, since there is no inbreeding and the dominant genes that aid their survival are naturally selected over time.[9] Most of their deaths occur due to accidents on the roads and railway tracks, starvation, drinking polluted water, tumors in the body, snakebites, or harm from humans.[26]

See also[edit]​

References[edit]​

  1. ^ van Asch, B.; Zhang, A.-b.; Oskarsson, M. C. R.; Klutsch, C. F. C.; Amorim, A.; Savolainen, P. (10 July 2013). "Pre-Columbian origins of Native American dog breeds, with only limited replacement by European dogs, confirmed by mtDNA analysis". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 280 (1766): 20131142. doi:10.1098/rspb.2013.1142. PMC 3730590. PMID 23843389.
  2. ^ Jump up to:a b Vellampalli, Jaya (13 January 2018). "Why the Indian Pariah is a perfect pet". Telangana Today. Retrieved 12 April 2019. Indian Pariah dog also known as the Pye Dog is a perfect pet. There is always some confusion when it comes to this specific dog breed. Most of us assume every street dog to be Pariah. But not all of them belong to this breed. Many strays are mixed breeds, often referred to as mongrels, and cannot be considered pure Pariah dogs.
  3. ^ "INDog-Primitive and Aboriginal Dogs Society".
  4. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Choudhury-Mahajan, Lina (12 July 2011). "Paws for thought". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  5. ^ Jump up to:a b c Vellampalli, Jaya (13 January 2018). "Why the Indian Pariah is a perfect pet". Telangana Today.
  6. ^ Jump up to:a b c "Article on the Indian Native Dog in the Kennel Gazette, Kennel Club of India, July 2015 – INDog Project".
  7. ^ "Primitive and Aboriginal Dogs Society, INDog".
  8. ^ Jump up to:a b Mukherjee Pandey, Jhimli (5 March 2019). "Rescued pup trains her way into elite dog squad". Times of India. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  9. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f Vellampalli, Jaya (13 January 2018). "Why the Indian Pariah is a perfect pet". Telangana Today. Retrieved 12 April 2019. They are commonly seen in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan. They adjust well in tropical climates as there is a mix of both winters and summers. But, even extreme weather conditions do not affect them in any way. This breed of dog sheds little fur. As they have short coat, the need for regular brushing and combing is less. They don’t even need regular bath as they do not have an unpleasant body odour. ... They are very devoted to their family/owners. In rural areas, these dogs are seen guarding farm animals. ... These dogs are free from all genetic health problems as they are a natural breed.
  10. ^ Jump up to:a b c "INDog, The Indian Pariah Dog Project". October 2010.
  11. ^ "Opening doors to what we call pariah". The Telegraph. 27 November 2005. Retrieved 12 April 2019. A pariah is a desi dog, while a stray is an ownerless dog and a mongrel is a mixed breed. In India, most strays are pariah dogs or mongrels.
  12. ^ Shannon, Laura M. (2015). "Genetic structure in village dogs reveals a Central Asian domestication origin". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (44): 13639–13644. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11213639S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1516215112. PMC 4640804. PMID 26483491.
  13. ^ "Dog conservation and the population genetic structure of dogs" (PDF).
  14. ^ "Indian breed dogs - Indian breed dogs - Indian street dog, dog breed lists". www.meramaal.com. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  15. ^ Chakrabarti, Pratik (June 2010). "Beasts of Burden: Animals and Laboratory Research in Colonial India". History of Science. 48 (2): 125–151. Bibcode:2010HisSc..48..125C. doi:10.1177/007327531004800201. PMC 2997667. PMID 20582325.
  16. ^ Merriam-Webster Dictionary
  17. ^ Purkayastha, Bandana (8 June 2005). Negotiating Ethnicity: Second-Generation South Asians Traverse a Transnational World. Rutgers University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-8135-3780-1. Desi is a Hindi/Urdu term for South Asian native
  18. ^ Kipling, Rudyard. (1894) The Jungle Book.
  19. ^ Pathak, Arun (1995). Handicrafts in the Indus Valley Civilization. Janaki Prakashan. ISBN 8185078874.
  20. ^ Cipriani, Lidio (1966). The Andaman Islanders. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 81.
  21. ^ Choudhury-Mahajan, Lina (12 July 2011). "Paws for thought". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  22. ^ Jump up to:a b c Sharma, Purnima (13 February 2017). "Desi stray dogs are finding loving homes thousands of miles away from the mean streets of India". Quartz. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  23. ^ "Are stray dogs a major problem in India?". 22 June 2018.
  24. ^ Harris, Gardiner (7 August 2012). "Where Streets Are Thronged with Strays Baring Fangs". The New York Times.
  25. ^ "Indian Pariah Dogs". 9 April 2020.
  26. ^ Pandey, Ashish (1 August 2021). "Over 300 dogs poisoned to death by Andhra village panchayat, alleges activist". India Today. India Today. Retrieved 11 October 2021.

External links[edit]​

30px-Commons-logo.svg.png
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Indian pariah dog.

show
Primitive dogs

show
Dogs originating in India and Sri Lanka
Categories:

Navigation menu​

Search​


Contribute​

Tools​

Print/export​

In other projects​

Languages​

Edit links
I'd carve open your chest partially keeping you just alive enough to watch me fuck your intestines with my dick you ugly mutt faggot...you'd enjoy it as I literally fucked u to death. In your last moments I'd cut a hole in your lung and fuck and cum inside of it as you slowly died and suffocated on my cum being forced Into you dying lungs you faggot. You'd love every second of it.
 
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this is what your uncle said before he molested you.

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The Bully Kutta is a type of large dog that originated in the Indian subcontinent, dating back to the 16th century. The Bully Kutta is a working dog used for hunting and guarding. The type is popular in the Punjab region of Pakistan. Wikipedia
 
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Image result for pakistani dog

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Description​


The Bully Kutta is a type of large dog that originated in the Indian subcontinent, dating back to the 16th century. The Bully Kutta is a working dog used for hunting and guarding. The type is popular in the Punjab region of Pakistan. Wikipedia
*hunting indians
 
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Reactions: justinzayn
*hunting indians
Yeah, my money big body, my money Tonka
No, I don't need you, I really don't want you (damn, Trgc made that?)
My money be twerkin', my money do dances (whoa)
Yeah, shut up
I already heard you, I don't wanna answer
You ruin everything you touch, you a cancer (yeah, yeah)
Yeah, I'm on the side where we win, no
You not that guy 'cause I'm him, yeah
I ride that big body right out the lot, it's a GLE, came with a tint
I don't wanna hear none of the shit that you sayin', you cap out your chinny-chin-chin (none)
I'm rockin' the latest designer, the finest of fur, that's that chinchilla skin (yeah)
 
ll my diamonds, they water, they elegant
shawty givin’ that brain like a pelican
had to slide on an opp, and we slide again
when i fuck on that bitch it was heaven sent
@Growth Plate
 
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Reactions: Growth Plate

Rate this frank ocean song best one imo
@Shako Mako
 
Yeah, my money big body, my money Tonka
No, I don't need you, I really don't want you (damn, Trgc made that?)
My money be twerkin', my money do dances (whoa)
Yeah, shut up
I already heard you, I don't wanna answer
You ruin everything you touch, you a cancer (yeah, yeah)
Yeah, I'm on the side where we win, no
You not that guy 'cause I'm him, yeah
I ride that big body right out the lot, it's a GLE, came with a tint
I don't wanna hear none of the shit that you sayin', you cap out your chinny-chin-chin (none)
I'm rockin' the latest designer, the finest of fur, that's that chinchilla skin (yeah)
cringe india
 

Rate this frank ocean song best one imo
@Shako Mako

The song is very good, Frank Ocean is my 2nd favourite faggot. My 1st is @OneTwoThree (He's only a semi faggot tho).
 
Ayo, did you (A) get hard for him and it was enough for you to coom all over the paper, or did you (B) just fap to some girl then spray your cum on the paper during the last second of your fap section?

Don't answer. I already know it was the first one, A

happy pride month fag
 
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Reactions: Deleted member 17311 and Deleted member 1901
Ayo, did you (A) get hard for him and it was enough for you to coom all over the paper, or did you (B) just fap to some girl then spray your cum on the paper during the last second of your fap section?

Don't answer. I already know it was the first one, A

happy pride month fag
A
 
Ayo, did you (A) get hard for him and it was enough for you to coom all over the paper, or did you (B) just fap to some girl then spray your cum on the paper during the last second of your fap section?

Don't answer. I already know it was the first one, A

happy pride month fag
A reminder that @Shako Mako fingers himself to the sight of me fucking his tight bussy with my 12 inch bharat supercock
 
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Reactions: Growth Plate
A reminder that @Shako Mako fingers himself to the sight of me fucking his tight bussy with my 12 inch bharat supercock
Wow i never knew this, thank you for telling me this new knowledge.
 
@Alexanderr pin this if you're racist
 
isnt this @indianoutlaw , wait wtf :feelswat::feelswat:
 
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  • Woah
Reactions: Deleted member 9779 and Sexually Disabled

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