The brows are prominent; the flews very long--sometimes a couple of inches--and the nostrils large and well dilated.
The peak is less prominent than that of the Bloodhound and the head shorter, but the flews large and loose.
Seems like as if that blame dog knows everything," he muttered as he saw Jan trotting to and fro over the trail, his flewssweeping the trodden snow with eager, questing gestures, his stern waving as with excitement of some sort.
He was sniffing hard at the trail, turning sharply from side to side, his flews in the snow, while his nostrils avidly drank in whatever it was they found there, as a parched dog drinks at a water-hole.
Jan licked at it, cutting his deep flews as he did so on the uneven edges of the tin.
In the bloodhound the skin is very loose and fine in texture all about the head and flews and dewlap.
From the stop to the point of the nose should be fairly long, the nostrils wide, and the jaws of nearly equal length; flews not to be pendulous.
The muzzle moderately deep and fairly square; from the stop to the point of the nose should be long, the nostrils wide, and the jaws of nearly equal length; flews not too pendulous.
The neck is long, but of great power; and in the Basset a jambes torses the flewsextend very nearly down to the chest.
The crowd shrieked with fear and delight, then surged and parted, and the dog came running through with its stern up, its head down, its forehead wrinkled, and the long drapery of its ears and flews hanging in folds about its face.
On seeing John for the first time, he broadened his big flews and stiffened his thick stern, according to his wont with all intruders, but in this instance the intruder was not afraid.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "flews" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.