A heifer is a young female cow.
It is a Heifer. A heifer is a young female milk cow that has not freshed.
Definitely not. Heifers are young female bovines, never male. The opposite of a heifer would be a young bull, which is a young male bovine.
A young bovine that has not had an offspring is called a heifer.
The generic name for a young cow is a heifer. If she is a first-calver, then she would be called a first-calf heifer, usually, though some people refer a "first-calf heifer" to a heifer whose dam was a young cow that has calved for the first time.
A heifer
The male counterpart of a heifer would be a bullock or a young virgin bull.
A heifer is the usual name for a young female bovine who hasn't had a calf. A heifer becomes a cow when it has had a calf.
We've named our heifer Daisy because she's our favorite young cow.
A heifer is young female bovine that has never given birth to a calf.A heifer may be considered a cow if:She successfully gives birth and raises her second calfShe reaches adult maturity at 4 years of ageSome people consider a heifer can become a cow after she gives birth to her first calf, but for many cattle producers she is merely considered a first-calf heifer, not a cow.
A ewe lamb.
For one, there's a likely chance that this "young heifer" is not a "young heifer" but a full-grown cow. Genetics will be the main reason for the uneven shape of the cow's udder. There's a very likely chance that her sire's scrotal shape was undesirable, and this passed on to his daughters. Even the cow's mother has a contribution to this undesirable trait.