Standard N° 13 / 7.11.1994 / GB
ENGLISH
TOY TERRIER (BLACK & TAN)
ORIGIN : Great Britain.
DATE
OF PUBLICATION OF THE VALID ORIGINAL STANDARD : 08.06.1988
CLASSIFICATION FCI : Group 3 Terriers
Section 4 Toy
Terriers
Without working
trial.
GENERAL
APPEARANCE : Well balanced, elegant and compact, sleek and cleanly built.
CHARACTERISTICS : Toy with Terrier
characteristics.
TEMPERAMENT : Alert,
remembering that historically he could acquit himself satisfactorily in the rat
pit. Never unduly nervous.
HEAD
& SKULL : Head long, narrow, flat skull, wedge‑shaped without emphasis
of cheek muscles, well filled up under eyes.
Top and bottom jaws held tightly together within compressed lips. Slight "stop". Foreface tapers gently
to provide wedge‑shaped impression, in profile similar to that seen when
viewed from front. Although an illusion
of being overshot can result, any suggestion of snipey appearance is
undesirable. Nose black.
EYES : Dark to black,
without light shading from iris. Small,
almond shaped, obliquely set and sparkling.
EARS : Candle‑flame
shape, slightly pointed tips, placed high upon back of skull and
proportionately close together. A guide
to size can be obtained by bending ear forward ‑ it should not reach
eye. From nine months of age ear
carriage must be erect. Entire inside of
ear should face front . Leather of ear
thin.
MOUTH : Jaws strong, with
a perfect, regular and complete scissor bite, i.e. the upper teeth closely
overlapping the lower teeth and set square to the jaws. Teeth level and strong.
NECK : Long, graceful, slightly arched. Shoulders well laid back. Line of neck
flowing into shoulders, and sloping off elegantly. Throatiness undesirable.
FOREQUARTERS : Legs falling
straight from shoulders with elbows close to chest providing a straight
front. Fine bone eminently desirable.
BODY : Body compact,
head and legs proportionate thus producing correct balance. Back very slightly curving from behind
shoulders to loin, falling again to root of tail. Chest narrow and deep with ribs well
sprung. Loins well cut up. Buttocks gently rounded.
HINDQUARTERS : Well‑rounded loin leading to a good turn of
stifle; hocks well let down; neither turning in nor out; a "tucked
under" appearance undesirable.
FEET : Dainty, compact;
split up between toes; well arched, with jet black nails, two middle toes of
front feet rather longer than others; hind feet cat‑like. Hare feet undesirable.
TAIL : Thick at root, tapering to point. Set low and not reaching below hock. 'Gay' tail undesirable if displayed to
excess.
GAIT/MOVEMENT : Ideal fore‑movement
akin to the "extended trot"; hackney action not desirable; equally a
"shuffling gait" undesirable. Hind action smooth with ease and
precision combined with drive; there should be flowing quality to indicate true
soundness.
COAT : Thick, close and
glossy. A density of short hair
required.
COLOUR : Black and
tan. The black ebony, the tan likened to
a new chestnut deeply rich.
Colours not running or blending into each
other, but meeting abruptly, forming clear and well defined lines of colour
division. Forelegs tanned to knees in
front. The tan then continuing inside
and at back of forelegs to point just below elbows; thin black line up each toe
(pencilling) and a clearly defined black mark (thumb mark) on centre of each
pastern, and under chin. Hindlegs well
tanned in front and inside with black bar dividing tan at centre of lower
thigh. Heavy tan on outside of
hindquarters (breaching or culottes) undesirable.
Muzzle well tanned. Nose black, the black continuing along top of
muzzle, curving below eyes to base of throat.
A tan spot above each eye and a small tan spot on each cheek. Under jaw and throat tanned, lip line
black. Hair inside ears tan (tan behind
ears undesirable). Each side of chest has some tan. Vent and under root of tail, tan. White hairs
forming a patch anywhere totally undesirable.
SIZE : Ideal
weight 2.7‑3.6 kg (6‑8
lbs).
Ideal height 25‑30 cm. (10‑12 ins) at the
shoulder.
FAULTS : Any departure
from the foregoing points should be considered a fault and the seriousness with
which the fault should be regarded should be in exact proportion to its degree.
NOTE : Male animals should have two apparently normal
testicles fully descended into the scrotum.