The difference between Canine and Houndly

When used as adjectives, canine means of, or pertaining to, a dog or dogs, whereas houndly means of, like, or characteristic of hounds or dogs.


Canine is also noun with the meaning: any member of caninae, the only living subfamily of canidae.

check bellow for the other definitions of Canine and Houndly

  1. Canine as an adjective:

    Of, or pertaining to, a dog or dogs.

  2. Canine as an adjective:

    Dog-like.

  3. Canine as an adjective (anatomy):

    Of or pertaining to mammalian teeth which are cuspids or fangs.

  4. Canine as an adjective (medicine, obsolete):

    Of an appetite: depraved or inordinate; used to describe eating disorders.

  1. Canine as a noun:

    Any member of Caninae, the only living subfamily of Canidae.

  2. Canine as a noun (formal):

    Any of certain extant canids regarded as similar to the dog or wolf (including coyotes, jackals, etc.) but distinguished from the vulpines, which are regarded as fox-like.

  3. Canine as a noun:

    In heterodont mammals, the pointy tooth between the incisors and the premolars; a cuspid.

  4. Canine as a noun (poker slang):

    A king and a nine as a starting hand in Texas hold 'em due to phonetic similarity.

  1. Houndly as an adjective:

    Of, like, or characteristic of hounds or dogs; doglike; dogly; canine.

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