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Discover LudwigThe phrase "and has fleas" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe an animal, typically a pet, that is infested with fleas, often in a humorous or informal context.
Example: "My dog loves to roll in the grass, but now he has a new problem: he has fleas."
Alternatives: "and is infested with fleas" or "and suffers from fleas."
Exact(1)
"Who's furry, scurries, and has fleas?
Similar(59)
They made fun of me because dogs followed me around and they thought I was dirty and had fleas and ticks.
Director of animal care Kerry Flanagan Bruni told Delaware Online that despite being underweight and having fleas, Sky is "doing great" and awaiting lab results testing for possible parasites.
Director of animal care Kerry Flanagan Bruni told Delaware Online that despite being underweight and having fleas, Sky is "doing great" and awaiting lab results testing for possible parasites.
"That carpet is years old — and, more than likely, it has fleas and flea eggs in it," she said.
For instance, take the phrase "My dog has fleas" and run it through a program that creates SHA-1 hashes, and you get: "bea0ce15a981ca655bef4679e2dbe91d24a378d6".
It would be as if "My dog has fleas" and "Yo momma insufficiently thin" resulted in the same stream of SHA-1 digits.
There is the occasional customer who has fleas – and just needs to bark to let you know.
Caution: wild squirrels bite and scratch seriously and can have fleas and mites -- and may carry diseases, rarely rabies.
Surely Washington has more lobbies than a derelict dog has fleas.
Make sure your cat has fleas.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com