No.
Eating, wearing, drinking
Eating, wearing, drinking
Phosphorus.
Cattle can spend around eight to 10 hours a day eating. They take breaks every few hours to rest and chew their cud before going back to eating again.
Cattle that are alive, responding to stimuli, moving around, eating, sleeping, etc. Live cattle is typically a market term for finisher cattle that are sold before slaughter.
According to the Christian Bible, over eating is known as the sin of gluttony.
You don't get "sinned" you sin (verb) or commit a sin (noun). To answer your question, I understand that practicing Hindu should have a vegetarian diet, so eating meat would be a breach of the faith - a sin.
No. Citrus peels have a bitter taste which can turn off cattle from eating the feed.
In most religious beliefs, eating apples is not considered a sin.
Cattle that are laying (or sitting) in the grass, or cattle laying down in the pasture.
No. Although, technically, if you eat more of it than you need to, you have committed the cardinal sin of gluttony.
According to the Bible, eating pork is considered a sin in the Old Testament, specifically in Leviticus 11:7-8. However, in the New Testament, Jesus declared all foods clean in Mark 7:19, so many Christians do not consider eating pork a sin.