yes
Yes you can feed chicken to chickens. As long as it is cooked they will not be able to recognize the taste of the cooked chicken to an other member of the flock. Eggs are also okay to give to chickens but they must be cooked and cracked so they are not recognizable as what they lay. I recommend mixing the cooked chicken with other things such as garden clippings.
Many types of meats can be cooked on a spit. While whole animals, such as a lamb, suckling pig or a chicken, are frequently cooked on spit, small joints of meat can be cooked as well.
If you could eat a dinosaur, which is impossible as they are now extinct, you would be able to eat some of them if they were cooked as 90% of dinosaurs were no bigger than a chicken. Some of the big ones however...
Spoiled chicken livers may have a sour smell, a slimy texture, or a grayish color. If there are any visible signs of mold, discoloration, or an off-putting odor, it's best to discard them to avoid foodborne illness.
If it is properly refrigerate
If you are in western sydney you can get nice one at 85 Market St, Smithfield NSW 2164‎ - (02) 9604 0233‎. If not give them a call and they wil probably know where you will be able to get them. or send them to you.
The cooked rice should not be eaten if left out overnight. Due to certain bacteria that might have grown in it, it might not be able to be cooked safe.
Absolutely. They will also be able to tell where you bought the chicken from. The same is true for mayonnaise. You are an idiot.
Rich Romans were able to eat different foods than the poor people of Rome were able to. For instance, they at whole plates of peacock tongues or were able to stuff meat inside of meat such as a chicken inside of a duck which would then go inside of a goose to be cooked all together. They would also use expensive spices on their foods such as nutmeg, pepper and cinnamon.
If the chicken was thawed out under refrigeration - Yes. It should be able to be used the next day.
Conventional advice says you should never feed a dog bones, particularly chicken bones, and doubly so cooked chicken bones. There is a possibility with any bone that the dog will not be able to digest the bone and it could cause an obstruction or laceration of the gastrointestinal tract, which is potentially fatal. Chicken bones tend to carry a higher risk of this, as they are smaller and easier to swallow whole. Cooked chicken bones carry an even higher risk as they are often quite brittle and tend to shatter into sharp splinters when chewed. Having said all this, some dogs can handle chicken bones, even cooked chicken bones, just fine - my parents have fed them to their large breed (90+ pound) dogs all their lives and never had a problem.
If you mean, "can you physically change your form to chicken through thought?" then no. You may be able to mentally trick yourself into actually believing (without a doubt) that you are a chicken.