in most other languages a cow still says moo because cow language is international. Cow's can't speak different languages because when they plot world domination they won't able to understand each other. :)
in some languages people dont say moo because they think it sounds differently so they might say something like 'ooo' instead
but the cows still say moo :p
In Swedish the cow goes "Muu!".
"Cow" in Afrikaans is "Koei." There are many other African languages, but I believe Afrikaans is the language you were referring to.
Cow is the English equivalent of 'vaca'. It's a feminine gender noun. The plural is 'vacas'.
No. In English, there's no such thing as gendered nouns in the sense that those exist in most other European languages (there are sex-differentiating nouns, like "cow" vs. "bull", but from a grammatical standpoint they're treated identically).
A baby cow is called a calf, in English.
"Cow" in English means mucca in Italian.
Cu in Modern Standard English is "cow." In Scots, however, and other English dialects, it is coo.
Ng'ombe is the Kikuyu word for the English word cow.
it starts from a cow or any other animal and then goes into humans
A cow grows in the same way many other mammals grow. They are born, they walk, eat, drink, and get larger as time goes on, and eventually they die.
English: "the cow" is German: "die Kuh".
No, because the cow goes over on its side not onto its legs.
The African Luhya term for the English word 'cow' is Ingombe.