Why is a dog wagging its tail?



The author posted a question in Animals, Plants

Why is a dog wagging its tail? and got a better answer

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Response from 0[+++++]
she loves you.

Response from 0[+++++]
she must like something.

Response from 0[+++++]
She has no human speech. She's showing everything with her gag, etc.

Response from 0[+++++]
Do you know what dog tags are? Or maybe you've seen dogs sniff each other when they meet? They sniff exactly where the tail grows from. Because that's where the glands that give off a dog's individual scent are located. When a dog is in a good mood he spreads this smell around as much as possible. And vice versa, when the dog whips his tail, it reduces the evaporation of his smell, and as a bovalenok pretends.

Response from 0[+++++]
So the dog is happy.

Response from 0[+++++]
the dog is happy!

Response from 0[+]
from happiness, I guess.

Response from 0[+++++]
And what's she wagging with? It's not a cable.

Response from 0[++++]
So she likes something.

Response from 0[+++++]
Why does a dog wag its tail? Because she's smarter than the tail. If the tail were smarter than the dog, it would wag the dog's tail! But seriously, here's the deal. Dogs, unlike people, recognize each other not by sight but by smell. The main source of the specific individual smell is a special gland located in the base of the tail of these animals. Therefore, when dogs get acquainted with each other they sniff under each other's tail. When they greet someone, they actively wag their tail to deliberately spread their scent, as if to introduce themselves. When a dog is afraid of something, he on the contrary wags his tail and hides the scent thus practically does not spread.

Response from 0[++++]
Legs are harder to wag.

 

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