No, if another animal has destroyed another animal's teritory, I'm sorry to say it's time to move on without those adorable babies.
No.
The correct form would be "their geese's eggs," indicating that the eggs belong to multiple geese.
yes
yes
goodness no!
The answer is quite simple. The eggs are her children and they belong to her...much the way a human mother protects her children.
Yes. Geese move north to lay their eggs, and south for the winter.
A goose is a bird, not a mammal. Birds are characterized by feathers, beaks, and laying eggs, while mammals have fur or hair and give birth to live young.
Geese are oviparous. Oviparous means laying eggs that hatch. Viviparous means gestating offspring inside the body, like mammals, which geese do not do. Geese are birds, they lay eggs and hatch out their babies from them.
Geese are oviparous. Oviparous means laying eggs that hatch. Viviparous means gestating offspring inside the body, like mammals, which geese do not do. Geese are birds, they lay eggs and hatch out their babies from them.
No, the correct grammar is "goose eggs". The plural of "goose" is "geese" and the correct plural possessive form is "goose's".
yes
Ducks and geese