The word ox or oxen can actually refer to both male and female bovines. A female ox is a cow, the male ox is a bull.
The word ox or oxen can actually refer to both male and female bovines; the term for male is bull, the female is cow.
No. An ox is a castrated bull that has been used to draught purposes.
Cow is singular. Cows is plural. They both mean a fully grown female of a domestic breed of ox used as milk or meat.
An ox is a neutered male bovine. The opposite gender to an ox is a female bovine, commonly known as a cow.
It is very rare for a female to be used for Ox because not only are females used for breeding purposes but they do not have the same muscle structure and strength that males do.
Ox issued for domestic use in southeast Asia, South America and Australia. A male ox is known as a steer (occasionally a bull if not castrated, like with most oxen found in southeastern Asia) while a female ox is known as a cow or heifer.
that is 5/8 of a cup
An ox is a castrated bull that is trained to pull carts, wagons, ploughs, etc. Cows are mature female bovines that have had at least two calves. Cows are primarily used for producing calves, and for those used in dairy production, for producing milk.
Yes, there are. The female is referred to as a cow, the male as a bull. and the young is called a calf.
Female mammals are the only organisms that can produce milk, period.
Still an ox, yet oxen that are female are extremely rare since most or all cattle that are used for draft work are castrated males, not females. Females are primarily used for breeding, not for draft work.