They can eat wheat but it depends on the farmer if they want to feed cows wheat.
Yes, but it's not acceptable for dairy cows,
Yes.
Hypothesis, since it is a statement that is being tentative about the natural world, in this case dairy cows and the response to their milking ability if they are fed wheat or not.
cows
By not eating dairy products. You can eat cows though. Just not their udders.
no, wrong . yes they do if they are fresh
Crickets can eat wheat, but any herbivore can eat wheat.(:
no they cant. they mostly eat wheat,barley,meadow grass,and oats.
Obviously, since humans are half to a third of the size of a bovine, they eat much less per month than either beef or dairy cows do.
Both (they drink milk there as well as eat beef) but there are more beef cattle.
Cows don't chew cheese. They're herbivores, they chew grass and hay and such, and chew, when they're sitting around and relaxed, partly digested forage matter that they regurgitated from their reticulo-rumen tract called cud. Milk is produced from cows (normally for their calves, but in the case of dairy cows, for human consumption), and the fatty content of milk is made into cheese and other creamy dairy products like ice cream, yogurt, and butter.
They can, just not too much too suddenly.