answersLogoWhite

0

Is a cow a solid

Updated: 9/19/2023
User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

Best Answer

Yes.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Is a cow a solid
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is bovine feces?

that would be the solid waste that comes out of a cow.


When a solid dissolve in water the solid is called a sollute is it true?

yes because the cow pooed a pie


Why is cow poop flat?

The consistency of fecal matter that comes from a cow is not completely solid, thus is unable to form a shape unlike that from horses, dogs and cats. Cow feces is part-solid part-liquid (more liquid when on rich pasture and more solid when on feed with low protein content), thus is able to create what is known as a "cow pattie" or "cow pie" when the animal stops and defecates in one spot.


How big is a cow's stomach?

The rumen can hold around 50 gallons of liquid and solid digesta.


Why is horse manure solid compared to cow manure?

Because a horse does not rechew its food. A cow ruminates, or rechews its food. A horse only chews its food once so the manure is courser.


What will happen if you drove into a cow?

The average cow (not steer) weighs about 1400 pounds and generally is pretty solid, whereas the average stag (male deer) weighs about 200 pounds. If hitting a deer can wreck a car just use your imagination as to what a cow can do! P.S. I sincerely hope you're not taking aim at the cow!


Is it harder to see a spotted cow from the air or a cow of only one colour?

It's harder to spot a cow that is more solid coloured than one that is spotted with black and white or brown and white. The white can be picked up by the eye much faster than an all-black, all-brown or all-grey cow.


How do you tell when a roast has spoiled?

A cow will have begged for a solid gold bell around her neck and the other cows have banged-up silver bells. ;-)


What type of inheritance explains the phenomenon of white cow being bred with a black cow and having black and white spotted babies?

This type of inheritance is impossible and therefore does not exist in cattle, for several reasons:You cannot breed cows to cows. You can only breed cows to bulls and vice versa. A cow is a mature female bovine that has had at least one or two calves. A bull is a male bovine (most often mature) that is used to breed cows in order to produce calves or, in your case, "babies."You cannot get the spotted inheritance from breeding a (supposedly) sold white bull/cow to a solid cow/bull. Cattle genetics suggest a much more likelier occurrence of getting a grey calf from this cross due to the strong dilution gene present in all cattle that are white or light-coloured.Solid to solid gets solid. Solid is dominant over spotted and thus will never occur when breeding solid to solid, ever. You will only get spotted (and only a small chance, at that) offspring if both parents are heterozygous for spotting or either one of them may be spotted themselves, which is obviously not the case in this question.A cow will more often than not give birth to one "baby" or calf, not several.If this type of inheritance did exist, it would be incomplete dominance or codominance.However, note that this inheritance (same type as mentioned above) does exist in Shorthorn cattle, where when you breed a solid red bull (or cow) to a solid white cow (or bull), you will have a high chance of getting a calf that is a roan colour, or to many who do not know what "roan" really means, a "spotted" red and white calf.But really, breeding a white bull to a black cow (or white cow to black bull) will give you a 100% chance of getting a grey calf. All calves, for example, as a result from breeding a Charolais bull to a herd Angus cows, will come out grey, not spotted black and white.


When is a cow a cow?

A "cow" is a cow when that "cow" is a she and she has given birth to at least one calf.


What is a cow dropping called?

Cow dung, cow patty, cow pie, cow feces, etc.


How many spots are on an average cow?

This question is irrelevant because not all cows have spots and those that have spots are of a particular breed like Holstein, for instance. The "average" cow cannot ever be expected to have spots--quite frankly, the average cow may be more solid-coloured than spotted!!