It's a part of the breed. A longhorn wouldn't be a longhorn without the horns.
the bighorn has big horns and the longhorn has long horns
Because they were bred to have large horns. It's all in the breeding.
There's really only one, and that is the Texas Longhorn.
Bevo is a longhorn with horns.. some doesn't have horns
It's a part of the breed. A longhorn wouldn't be a longhorn without the horns.
Horn length can often be 6 feet or more from tip to tip.
Only if you are referring to something that belongs to that particular longhorn, like it's horns, head, hooves, legs, etc. If you are not referring to something that belongs to something or someone else, then there's no need for an apostrophe.
try putting in 'photos of bulls'. See if there are longhorn bulls. This might help.
A longhorn steer a castrated male bovine of the cattle breed Texas Longhorn They have horns, and hair colouration varies wildly between each animal. Check out the pictures below for more. However this steer may be called a longhorn but instead of actually being a Texas Longhorn steer, but a steer of a different breed including Ankole-Watusi, Corriente, English Longhorn, Florida Cracker/Pineywoods, Spanish Criollo, Spanish Fighting Bulls, etc.
(Also called) Texas longhorn. A long-horned breed of beef cattle, usually red or variegated, formerly common in the southwestern U.S. 2 a British breed of beef cattle with long curved horns
Yes and no. The Longhorn is actually a breed of the domestic bovine, which is one that has both cows and bulls (both horned) to make up that breed. The adage that "all bulls have horns" is not true, though, even though all bulls (and cows) of this breed are indeed horned.