It means that the person is extremely hungry and could eat just about any serving size put in front of them. It actually has nothing to do with the cow itself, just the size.
Very hungry
well, it is not possible to eat a whole cow in one bite
cow is producer
Probably not
Yes.
Several animals eat jaggery. It can be given raw as a treat or used to sweeten feed. A couple animals that eat it are cows and horses.
no
Eat it too-meaning have it all. It's an expression.
It depends on the size of the shark and the size of the food. You can't eat a cow whole but you can one hamburger at a time.
Chick-Fil-A's mascot is the cow, because they're selling chicken. It's meaning, don't eat beef, it chicken. That's why the cow says eat mor chikin!
I DID turn into a cow once. She left a big ol' dent in the fender of my pickup-truck. Seriously, you don't become the thing you eat. Even if you could eat a whole cow--several hundred pound of beef--you wouldn't become a cow anymore than you become a deep fried pastry when you have breakfast at a doughnut shop.
Why would you even think about doing that? Good luck. I woudn't recommend trying it In order to eat a live cow, you would have to be big enough to put it in your mouth whole. If you are butchering it, slicing of portions for eating, they will be dead when you eat them even if the cow isn't. It would be incredibly cruel to do this.
Maybe as a treat, but not as a main source nor whole because she may choke on it, like if you were to feed a whole apple to a cow.
This saying is a Hyperbole or exaggeration of how hungry you are, you are so hungry you could a whole cow, but physically that would be impossible.
No.
Because long ago King luis XIV started to ride on his royal cow. suddenly his cow fell into this giant hole with him. The cow lived off the grass in the ground, but eventually he died. His spearit stoped any cow to grow throught the grass and made cows eat grass to expierience the pain that he had in the whole
well, it is not possible to eat a whole cow in one bite
There's no such thing as an "organic cow." A cow is a cow, regardless. She will eat what "normal" cows eat, which is defined in the related question posted below.