Yes. The only thing is that this "bull" is actually called a bull calf: the "calf" part of "bull" is dropped after the calf reaches around yearling age (~9 to 10 months of age). A cow has just as much of a chance of giving birth to a bull calf as a heifer calf. The sex or gender of her calf is determined by the sperm of the bull she was bred to, not the cow herself.
females: cows males: bulls babies: pups
Bulls are males , they doNOT have babies, only cows have babies , theya re called calves.
Male elephants are called bulls, females are cows.
It's the same as cattle - males are bulls, females are cows and babies are calves.
Bulls are the males of several species, such as cows and elephants. Bulls breed with females(cows) to create babies ( calves). Without bulls the species would die out. In cattle, bulls are usually castrated and are then called steers. Then they are less aggressive and can be kept in large groups. They also tend to fatten quicker and don't have the more gamey taste of a bull.
Of course there are both. But for the beef the bulls are castrated and they are called steers. The females are also sometimes used for beef but they are called Heifers. That just means that they have not had babies.
Male cows don't exist. There are only cows and bulls, no female cows, male cows, male bulls, female bulls. With that said, only cows (which are, by definition, mature female bovines that have given birth to at least one calf) are ones that have cervixes, bulls do not. Bulls have their major reproductive organs close to or mostly outside their body, cows have theirs inside.
In my opinion the word for cows and bulls in a group is called a herd.
All bulls are male. Cows are female, mostly.
Yes they do because all cows are girls and all bulls are boys
No. Bulls and cows see things the same way as the other.
No.