Origin: In the 1500's, a lot of people owned cows and sheep. These are animals that chew their cuds (food that is spit up from the stomach to the mouth and chewed again). It is a long process.
It is just an idiom and has no history.
Palestinian and Persian
food
Meaning he will help you out.
The origin of the idiom finger in every pie is unknown. The saying means being involved in a lot of things or knowing about a lot of things.
Yes. Bongos chew their cud.
No. Pigs are not ruminant; none of them chew cud.
Yes, like the cow, the bison regurgitate their food. Yes, Bison chew cud.
"To chew the cud" is "ruminer" "The cud" is "la panse" A cud-chewing animal is "un ruminant"
Cud. Cows regergitate grass and it is call cud. Hence cows chew their cud.
Yes. The Watusi is a breed of cow, which is a ruminant, which chews cud.
yes =D
Chickens do not have hooves at all and do not chew their cud. They are however considered to be Kosher animals according to Jewish tradition.
No. For a land animal to be Kosher it has to have split hooves AND chew its cud. A pig isn't kosher because it doesn't chew it's cud.
Yes bison chew their cud and have double-toed hooves like cows.
Ruminants, such as cows, sheep, goats, and deer, have hooves and chew cud. Cud is partially digested food that is regurgitated and rechewed to aid in better digestion.
Saliva and of course their mouths.