General Appearance
Size, Proportion, Symmetry
Head
Neck, Topline, Body
Forequarters
Hindquarters
Coat and Skin
Color of Coat
Gait
Temperament
Scale of Points
General Appearance
The perfect Bulldog
must be of medium size and smooth coat; with heavy, thickset, low-swung
body, massive short-faced head, wide shoulders and sturdy limbs. The
general appearance and attitude should suggest great stability, vigor
and strength. The disposition should be equitable and kind, resolute and
courageous (not vicious or aggressive), and demeanor should be pacific
and dignified. These attributes should be countenanced by the expression
and behavior.
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Size, Proportion, Symmetry
Size --
The
size for mature dogs is about 50 pounds; for mature bitches about 40
pounds. Proportion -- The circumference of the skull in front of the
ears should measure at least the height of the dog at the shoulders.
Symmetry
--
The "points" should be well distributed and bear
good relation one to the other, no feature being in such prominence from
either excess or lack of quality that the animal appears deformed or
ill-proportioned.
Influence of Sex
--
In comparison of specimens of
different sex, due allowance should be made in favor of the bitches,
which do not bear the characteristics of the breed to the same degree of
perfection and grandeur as do the dogs.
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Head
Eyes and
eyelids
--
The eyes, seen
from the front, should be situated low down in the skull, as far from
the ears as possible, and their corners should be in a straight line at
right angles with the stop. They should be quite in front of the head,
as wide apart as possible, provided their outer corners are within the
outline of the cheeks when viewed from the front. They should be quite
round in form, of moderate size, neither sunken nor bulging and in color
should be very dark. The lids should cover the white of the eyeball,
when the dog is looking directly forward, and the lid should show no
"haw".
Ears
--
The ears should be set high
in the head, the front inner edge of each ear joining the outline of the
skull at the top back corner of skull, so as to place them as wide
apart, and as high, and as far from the eyes as possible. In size they
should be small and thin. The shape termed "rose-ear" is the
most desirable. The rose ear folds inward at its back lower edge, the
upper front edge curving over, outward and backward, showing part of the
inside of the burr. (The ears should not be carried erect or prick-eared
or buttoned and should never be cropped).
Skull
--
The skull should be
very large, and in circumference, in front of the ears, should measure
at least the height of the dog at the shoulders. Viewed from the front,
it should appear very high from the corner of the lower jaw to the apex
of the skull, and also very broad and square. Viewed at the side, the
head should appear very high, and very short from the point of the nose
to occiput. The forehead should be flat (not rounded or domed), neither
too prominent not overhanging the face.
Cheeks
-- The cheeks should be
well-rounded, protruding sideways and outward beyond the eyes.
Stop
-- The temples or frontal bones should be very well defined, broad, square
and high, causing a hollow or grove between the eyes. This indentation,
or stop, should be both broad and deep and extend up the middle of the
forehead, dividing the head vertically, being traceable to the top of
the skull.
Face and muzzle
-- The face, measured from the front of the
cheekbone to the tip of the nose, should be extremely short, the muzzle
being very short, broad, turned upward and very deep from the corner of
the eye to the corner of the mouth.
Nose
--
The nose
should be large, broad and black, its tip set back deeply between the
eyes. The distance from bottom of stop, between the eyes, to the tip of
the nose should be as short as possible and not exceed the length from
the tip of nose to the edge of underlip. The nostrils should be wide,
large and black, with a well-defined line between them. Any nose other
than black is objectionable and a brown or liver-colored nose shall
disqualify.
Lips
--
The chops or "flews" should be thick,
broad, pendant and very deep, completely overhanging the lower jaw at
each side. They join the underlip in front and almost or quite cover the
teeth, which should be scarcely noticeable when the mouth is closed.
Jaws
--
The jaws should be massive, very broad, square and
"undershot", the lower jaw projecting considerably in front of
the upper jaw and turning up.
Teeth --
The teeth should be large and
strong, with the canine teeth or tusks wide apart, and the six small
teeth in front, between the canines, in an even, level row.
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Neck, Topline, Body
Neck
--
The neck
should be short, very thick, deep and strong and well arched at the
back.
Topline --
There should be a slight fall in the back, close behind
the shoulders (its lowest part), whence the spine should rise to the
loins (the top of which should be higher than the top of the shoulders),
thence curving again more suddenly to the tail, forming an arch (a very
distinctive feature of the breed), termed "roach back" or,
more correctly, "wheel back".
Body --
The brisket and body
should be very capacious, with full sides, well rounded ribs and very
deep from the shoulders down to its lowest part, where it joins the
chest. It should be well-let-down between the shoulders and forelegs,
giving the dog a broad, low, short legged appearance.
Chest --
The chest
should be very broad, deep and full.
Underline --
The body should be
well-ribbed-up behind with the belly tucked up and not rotund.
Back and
Loin --
The back should be short and strong, very broad at the shoulders
and comparatively narrow at the loins.
Tail
--
The
tail may be either straight or "screwed" (but never curved or
curly), and in any case must be short, hung low, with decided downward
carriage, thick root and fine tip. If straight, the tail should be
cylindrical and of uniform taper. If "screwed", the bends or
kinks should be well-defined, and they may be abrupt and even knotty,
but no portion of the member should be elevated above the base or root.
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Forequarters
Shoulders
-- Should be
muscular, very heavy, widespread and slanting outward, giving stability
and great power.
Forelegs --
The forelegs should be short, very stout,
straight and muscular, set wide apart, with well-developed calves,
presenting a bowed outline, but the bones of the legs should not be
curved or bandy, nor the feet brought too close together.
Elbows --
The
elbows should be low and stand well out and loose from the body.
Feet --
The feet should be moderate in size, compact and firmly set.
Toes
compact, well-split-up, with high knuckles and very short stubby nails.
The front feet may be straight or slightly out-turned.
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Hindquarters
Legs
--
Hind legs should be
strong and muscular and longer than forelegs, so as to elevate loins
above shoulders. Hocks should be slightly bent and well-let-down, so as
to give length and strength from loins to hock. Lower leg should be
short, straight and strong, with stifles turned slightly outward and
away from the body. Hocks are thereby made to approach each other, and
the hind feet to turn outward.
Feet
--
Should be moderate in size,
compact and firmly set. Toes compact, well-split-up, with high knuckles and short stubby nails.
Hind feet should be pointed well-outward.
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Coat and Skin
Coat
-- Should be straight, short, flat, close, of fine texture, smooth
and glossy. (No fringe, feather or curl).
Skin
--
The skin should be soft and loose, especially at the head, neck and
shoulders.
Wrinkles
and dewlap --
The head and face should be covered with heavy
wrinkles, and at the throat, from jaw to chest, there should be two
loose pendulous folds, forming the dewlap.
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Color of Coat
The color of coat should
be uniform, pure of its kind and brilliant. The various colors found in
the breed are to be preferred in the following order: 1. red brindle; 2.
all other brindles; 3. solid white; 4. solid red, fawn or fallow; 5.
piebald; 6. inferior qualities of all the foregoing.
Note:
A perfect piebald is preferable to a muddy brindle or defective
solid color. Solid black is very undesirable, but not so objectionable
if occurring to a moderate degree in piebald patches. The brindles to be
perfect should have a fine, even and equal distribution of the composite
colors. In brindles and solid colors a small white patch on the chest is
not considered detrimental. In piebalds the color patches should be
well-defined, of pure color and symmetrically distributed.
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Gait
The style and carriage are
peculiar, his gait being a loose-jointed, shuffling, sidewise motion,
giving the characteristic "roll". The action must be, however,
be unrestrained, free and vigorous.
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Temperament
The disposition should
be equable and kind, resolute and courageous (not vicious or
aggressive), and demeanor should be pacific and dignified. These
attributes should be countenanced by the expression and behavior
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GENERAL PROPERTIES
|
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22
|
| Proportion and symmetry |
5 |
|
| Attitude |
3 |
|
| Expression |
2 |
|
| Gait. |
3 |
|
| Size |
3 |
|
| Coat |
2 |
|
| Color of coat |
4 |
|
|
|
|
|
HEAD
|
|
39
|
| Skull |
5 |
|
| Cheeks |
2 |
|
| Stop |
4 |
|
| Eyes and eyelids |
3 |
|
| Ears |
5 |
|
| Wrinkle |
5 |
|
| Nose |
6 |
|
| Chops |
2 |
|
| Jaws |
5 |
|
| Teeth |
2 |
|
|
|
|
|
BODY, LEGS, ETC.
|
|
39
|
| Neck |
3 |
|
| Dewlap |
2 |
|
| Shoulders |
5 |
|
| Chest |
3 |
|
| Ribs |
3 |
|
| Brisket |
2 |
|
| Belly |
2 |
|
| Back |
5 |
|
| Forelegs and elbows |
4 |
|
| Hind legs |
3 |
|
| Feet |
3 |
|
| Tail |
4 |
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
100 |
DISQUALIFICATION -- A brown or liver-colored nose.
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