It is possible that your dog licked a chocolate wrapper.
It is possible that your dog has licked a chocolate wrapper. It is important to monitor your dog for any signs of chocolate poisoning, such as vomiting, diarrhea, or restlessness, and contact your veterinarian for advice.
I think they can get really sick or die
If your dog has licked a small amount of chocolate, it is important to monitor them for any signs of chocolate toxicity, such as vomiting, diarrhea, restlessness, or increased heart rate. It is best to contact your veterinarian for advice on how to proceed.
English words have been traditionally classified into eight lexical categories, or parts of speech (and are still done so in most dictionaries). The appropriate parts of speech are in bold:Noun: The dog licked my ice cream.Pronoun: His dog licked my ice cream.Adjective (any qualifier of a noun): His fat dog licked my chocolate ice cream.Verb: His dog licked my ice cream.Adverb: His dog hungrily licked my ice cream.Preposition: His dog licked the ice cream in my hand.Conjunction: I kicked his dog because it licked my ice cream.Interjection: Sit down dog!
There is one syllable in the word "licked."
That's good for you. Im glad that you didnt steal the cookies. You probably did steal the cookies, but then licked the chocolate stains off your hands, so that isn't a very good alibi.
If the dog really has only licked it, I don't think it'd possible for the dog to get any important amount into itself. It should be safe,
We watched quietly from the window as the deer licked the salt block outside.
Chandler was the only friend licked on the subway, Phoebe was the one that licked him!
The past tense of lick is licked.
because its so nice being licked