housetrained

house·train

also house-train (hous′trān′)
tr.v. house·trained, house·train·ing, house·trains also house-trained or house-train·ing or house-trains
To housebreak.

house′trained′ adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

housetrained

housebroken
Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words by Diagram Group Copyright © 2008 by Diagram Visual Information Limited
References in periodicals archive ?
He is housetrained, happy to be left alone up to four hours providing he has things to keep him occupied.
Beth is still too young to expect her to be fully housetrained, it can take a few months.
Potty-training situations are of three types: (1) dogs who have never learned the appropriate place "to go," (2) dogs who were once housetrained but are having a training regression, and (3) dogs who are pottying involuntarily--that is, they have no control over their urination or defecation.
A I know just where you are coming from because I got my new Westie, Yuki (Japanese for Snowy), at 10 weeks and now, at 20 weeks, she is fairly well housetrained as long as she is at home with no change in schedule.
New York, NY, May 04, 2014 --(PR.com)-- The number one reason dogs are given up is because they are not housetrained. The most effective way to housetrain a dog/puppy is to limit its responsibility.
But despite being fully housetrained, well-mannered and friendly, the three-yearold is still homeless.
She can also live with children over the age of 12, and she is housetrained.
She is housetrained, likes the company of most other dogs, and would love a home with older kids and an active lifestyle.
She is fully housetrained, and loves a walk in the park where she can chase after a ball.
A new man is considered housetrained when he sees things through the eyes of the senior civil servants.
Rory is still too young to expect him to be fully housetrained, it can take a few months.
After he is well housetrained, there is no need to keep him a small space--he can have a bigger crate if he likes.