![]() Half-Turn Belly Rake - Turn onto your side, slip under the opponent's belly, rake it with your claws, then swiftly turn back onto all fours out from under your opponent.This makes you vulnerable to the belly rake, so it takes great strength and speed. If opponent does the same, wrestle and flip them under you. Rear up on back legs and bring weight down on opponent. Upright Lock - Final, crushing move on already weakened opponent.This move is similar to the leap-and-hold except your claws remain free to fight. Teeth Grip - Target your opponent's extremities – the legs, tail, scruff or ears – and sink in your teeth and hold.Tail Yank - Grab your opponent's tail and yank it with such force that your opponent is thrown off balance.Most effective against rats, who are small enough to throw. Scruff Shake - Secure a strong teeth grip in the scruff of your opponent's neck then shake violently until they are too rattled to fight back.This will throw off an unwary opponent and put you in attacking position. When your opponent relaxes their grip, thinking you are defeated, push yourself up explosively. ![]() Play Dead - Effective in a tight situation, such as when you are pinned.Slashing, clawing, and leaping together, battle pairs can be a whirlwind of danger for attackers. Partner Fighting - Warriors who have trained and fought together will often fall instinctively into a defensive position, each protecting each other's back while fending off an opponent on either side.Watch for the drop-and-roll counter move, and try to jump free before you get squashed. A group of apprentices can defeat a large and dangerous warrior in this way. Now you are beyond the range of the opponent's paws and in position to inflict severe body wounds. Spring onto opponent's back and grip with unsheathed claws. Leap-and-hold - Ideal for a small cat facing a larger opponent.Quick and silent and sometimes considered dishonorable. Killing Bite - A death blow to the back of the neck.Slice downward with your front paw at the face or body of your opponent. Front Paw Strike/Forepaw Slash - Frontal attack.Bring your front paw down hard on your opponent's head. If you're pinned down, the belly rake quickly puts you back into control. Slice with unsheathed claws against the soft flesh of the opponent's belly. Judge opponent's distance from you carefully, then lash out with your back legs, taking all weight on your front paws. Back Kick - Explosive surprise move to catch opponent from behind.Search interest has been modified to reflect usage in accordance to the meme. The term boop is often searched for in relation to the fictional character "Betty Boop". The phrase "Imma boop your (head/nose)." is often used as a snowclone as well. Variations of images have been made which either featured a head boop or an nose boop. ![]() DeviantArt also features a wide selection of creations tagged "boop" in their gallery. The social news company Buzzfeed has also created many posts featuring "boop animals" since 2012. The subreddit /r/boop was created September 9th, 2009, and has over 33,600 subscribers as of October 2015. The comment and the image were then converted to macro form. The image was then posted to Facebook where the comment "You booped him!" was left. The phrase did not receive image macro form until late 2010 when Flickr user Doug Mahugh uploaded his image "Love Tap" to the site. The earliest definition of the word boop was submitted to Urban Dictionary on April 12, 2003. In the 1992 Simpsons episode "Lisa's First Word", the sound effect can be heard at the end of the episode, when Bart places a postage stamp on baby Lisa's nose in an attempt to mail her away.Ī similar sound effect can be heard in the 1999 film Dogma in a scene where Bethany (Linda Fiorentino) asks God (Alanis Morrisette) "Why are we here?" God responds by touching Bethany's nose while saying "Bwerp!" Though the exact origin of the word is unknown, examples of the sound effect can be found in early '90s media. ![]()
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