My chihuahua acts like it's her room and she's the nice one letting me sleep on te bed, but she's so cute when she's all sprawled and relaxed so I let her sleep that way
Yep, my dog likes to sleep right next to me, her neck wrapped round mine, head on the pillow, under the duvet. I got so sick of been suffocated I bought myself a double bed haha.
You're supposed to use a comma to separate two or more adjectives that describe the same noun. Without the comma "sprawled" out would be describing "sleeping" instead of "pet." The comma makes it grammatically correct.
I have a 26kg pitbull who insists on sleeping under the duvet with me- and 2 cats who vye for any remaining space. I literally don't have an inch to move most nights. And I love them too much to do anything about it.
So true. There have been times where I've either had to lie on top of my dog or get squished onto one tiny side of the bed... Like right now.
My chihuahua acts like it's her room and she's the nice one letting me sleep on te bed, but she's so cute when she's all sprawled and relaxed so I let her sleep that way
Yep, my dog likes to sleep right next to me, her neck wrapped round mine, head on the pillow, under the duvet. I got so sick of been suffocated I bought myself a double bed haha.
You're supposed to use a comma to separate two or more adjectives that describe the same noun. Without the comma "sprawled" out would be describing "sleeping" instead of "pet." The comma makes it grammatically correct.
No, you don't always need to do that. A cute golden retriever isn't a cute, golden retriever. A big white pillow isn't a big, white pillow.
Although... I suppose this case could be either of those, without a comma or with one I mean. Never mind my comment then, carry on.
I have four dogs and you'd be shocked by how much space one yorkie/chihuahua can take up.
I have a 26kg pitbull who insists on sleeping under the duvet with me- and 2 cats who vye for any remaining space. I literally don't have an inch to move most nights. And I love them too much to do anything about it.