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An snake do suffocate the own owner. It do mean she have againt hatred to the him or not?
8 Answers
- Anonymous4 months ago
Yes, snakes be suffocating the own owner as opposed to - well, as opposed to something else.
- The First DragonLv 74 months ago
No, if a snake is angry it bites. If it suffocates its owner, it is an accident. Snakes normally only kill what they can swallow whole. Yet they enjoy human contact [if they are tame] because of the warmth, and may wind themselves around.
- Anonymous5 months ago
snakes do not feel towards their owners, they forget the owners and that’s why many think they’re not a good pet. whether they like or dislike isn’t known.
- ?Lv 75 months ago
No hatred, just the impetus to survival. I knew one person who raised large constrictors. He kept a revolver near the cages. So far as I know, he never had to use it. OTOH, I have lost three colleagues to the bites of venomous snakes. The big constrictors are safer.
Smaller constrictors (say, up to 8' or so) are less dangerous. They do constrict but that is mostly in an effort to hold on. As long as you are not stupid enough to have one around your neck, no problem.
- keerokLv 75 months ago
The snake only does what it knows. No other thing in mind, no emotions, just survival.
- Anonymous5 months ago
Something aroused its snakish temper.