you mean a rooster? some people describe it as 'cockle-doodle-doo.', but it sounds more like 'goo-goo-goo-gooo'! sort of...
Roosters can make many sounds, but the most famous is a crow.
Crowing
'cock-a-doodle-doo'
caw because a rooster makes a crow and a crow makes a caw so they are opposites.
rooster
First, you must specify the language. For example, English cock-a-doodle doo (the rooster sound) is French cocorico, Spanish quiquiriquí, Italian chicchirichì.
Yes.
Roosters crow.
Gravity.
A hog sometimes makes a snorting sound, and sometimes makes a squealing sound.
Rooster can be cooked or baked the same as you would with a regular chicken. A rooster can be made into a stew or cooked inside a crockpot. Those would be the best choices to cook a rooster because the meat is tough and slow cooking it makes the meat more tender.
Not typically. Any breed of hen can make a crowing sound but it is often done by hens in a flock that has no rooster. The alpha hen in a flock of chickens without a rooster will often take over the "guard" duties of a rooster.
It means that the sound of the crowing of the rooster (cockerel) in the mornings woke the soldiers up. The rooster acted like an alarm clock. 'Alarm clock' is therefore a metaphor for 'rooster'. Had the sentence read 'The far-off rooster was like an alarm clock for the sleeping soldiers' it would have been a simile.
cock-a-doodle-doo