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  2. Leg-yield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leg-yield

    The leg-yield and half-pass are sometimes confused because they are both movements in which the horse goes forward and sideways. However, the half-pass is quite a bit more advanced, requiring greater balance, engagement, and collection from the horse. In the leg-yield, the horse is fairly straight or bent slightly away from the direction of travel.

  3. Canine gait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canine_gait

    The rear legs overreach on the outside of the front legs. Essential for a fast dog is the ability to flex its back from a straight position to an arched position. A permanent arch is inflexible and is considered a serious fault. The double suspension gallop is a leaping gait, with the hind legs first propelling the dog into the air and then ...

  4. Lateral movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_movement

    The side pass (also called the full pass or full travers), leg yield, and half-pass all ask the horse to move sideways. The leg-yield and half-pass are seen in dressage, and require the horse to have forward movement, resulting in the horse moving in a diagonal line. The main difference between the two movements is the direction of bend: with ...

  5. Digitigrade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digitigrade

    Unguligrade animals, such as horses and cattle, walk only on the distal-most tips of their digits. Digitigrade animals walk on their distal and intermediate phalanges ; more than one segment of the digit makes contact with the ground, either directly (as in birds) or via paw-pads (as in dogs and cats).

  6. Horse gait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_gait

    When walking, a horse's legs follow this sequence: left hind leg, left front leg, right hind leg, right front leg, in a regular 1-2-3-4 beat. At the walk, the horse will alternate between having three or two feet on the ground. A horse moves its head and neck in a slight up and down motion that helps maintain balance. [6]

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  8. Hobble (device) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobble_(device)

    Hopples (sometimes called hobbles) are a piece of equipment used by Standardbred pacers to help the horse maintain its pacing gait. Humble or one leg hobble is a strap placed around the front pastern, and then the leg is lifted and the strap is wrapped around the upper leg and then buckled, leaving the horse with three legs to stand on.

  9. The tail wags the dog: Top recession indicator now ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/tail-wags-dog-top-recession...

    The inverted yield curve—a recession indicator with a decades-long track record of accuracy—has evolved beyond serving as a warning of a future downturn and now sways the economy, its creator ...