it does.
It laid about 15 eggs
No, dinosaur's are extinct.
All of them lay eggs.
Yes, oviraptors laid eggs. Fossil evidence, including clutches of eggs found in Mongolia, suggests that these dinosaur species were oviparous, meaning they reproduced by laying eggs. Some oviraptor fossils have even been discovered in nests, indicating parental care, which adds to our understanding of their reproductive behaviors.
It was not possible for a male dinosaur to lay eggs. That would be like getting a male dog to have puppies... It's not physiologically possible.
They are cold blooded and lay eggs.
no they berried them because if the sat on there eggs it would crush them
Yes, they lay eggs like a bird numbskull
dinosaurs lay eggs in a lonely place to save their eggs from other predators such as under trees etc.
There are several types of dinosaurs. They can lay from one up to very many (e.g. a fish-type dinosaur). This question needs more detail.
A nest of the dinosaur Deinonychus has never been found. However, one specimen supposedly brooding a single egg has been found. Analysis of the egg indicates that it probably belonged to the Deinonychus. Its size is extremely close to an Oviraptor egg and Deinonychus itself is of a similar size to that dinosaur. Citipati has known nest clutches numbering ~20 eggs. Furthermore, a nest supposed to be of a Troodont dinosaur (very close relatives to the Dromaeosaurs like Deinonychus) was found in Spain and numbered ~20 eggs. In short, the best guess would be around 20 eggs in a clutch.
No that's not true. Are you ok? Who doesn't know that hens lay eggs? And where did you hear that? Oh gosh