English Bulldog Daddy Meets His Daughter For The First Time, Extreme Adorableness Ensues

English Bulldog Daddy Meets His Daughter For The First Time, Extreme Adorableness Ensues
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Father's Day may be over, but daddy-daughter interactions will never stop being adorable. Especially when the daddy and daughter in question are pups.

In the video above, watch an English Bulldog dad, named Chaucer, meet his puppy for the first time. At first he doesn't know what to make of her, then, around the 3:15 mark, things get really cute as he begins to gently play with her. Too sweet!

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Before You Go

The Best Animal Dads
Penguins(01 of12)
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Most penguin parents share child rearing duties equally, building nests, warming eggs and foraging for food in turn, according to National Geographic. The main exception is the male Emperor Penguin, who assumes all parenting duties for up to two months once an egg is laid.(Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Lions(02 of12)
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Much like "The Lion King," lion dads are responsible for the protection and training of their cubs. Fatherhood often includes capturing prey that are too large for their offspring and protecting them from other lions, according to the University of Minnesota.(JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Swans(03 of12)
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Swans often form monogamous relationships that can last for years, and both males and females are responsible for nest building and chick-rearing, according to the New York Department of Environmental Conservation.(AP Photo/WCS, Julie Larsen Maher) (credit:AP)
Seahorses(04 of12)
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Seahorses are famous for their fatherhood duties. Males carry eggs in a gestation pouch for about a month before releasing free-swimming young into the ocean to fend for themselves, according to National Geographic.(AP Photo/Monterey Bay Aquarium, Randy Wilder) (credit:AP)
Marmosets(05 of12)
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Newborn marmosets are carried on their fathers' backs immediately after birth, according to the National Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin. Babies are gradually allowed time off until they can move on their own.(JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Poison Dart Frogs(06 of12)
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Soon after female poison dart frogs lay their eggs, males stand guard for two weeks as the embryos develop. After they hatch, tadpoles swim onto their father's back and are carried to another pool of water to turn into full-fledged frogs, according to the National Zoo.(JOERG KOCH/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Giant Water Bugs(07 of12)
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Giant water bug fathers carry nearly 150 eggs on their back for the three weeks they take to hatch, according to the Woodland Park Zoo. (credit:WikiMedia)
Emperor Tamarins(08 of12)
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Like marmosets, newborn emperor tamarins are carried on their father's back until they're big enough to walk on their own, according to the BBC.(BODO MARKS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
Wolves(09 of12)
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Wolf packs are highly social. PBS reports that when the alpha pair breeds, the entire group helps raise the cubs.(AP Photo/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife) (credit:AP)
Rheas(10 of12)
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Male rheas play a unique fatherly role among other bird populations. Dads incubate and care for chicks alone and occasionally nest with other males, sharing incubation duties, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. (credit:WikiMedia)
Lumpsuckers(11 of12)
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Male lumpsuckers are incredibly defensive of their young, holding watch over 300,000 eggs for six to seven weeks, according to the UK's NAFC Marine Center. (credit:WikiMedia)
Jacanas(12 of12)
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Jacanas dads are big contributors to the rearing of their young, incubating eggs and carrying newborn chicks under their wings until they're big enough to forage for themselves, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.(DANIEL GARCIA/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)