Kinetic energy
Heat and light energy gets transformed as energy for the plants to grow via the process of photosynthesis. The cows eat the grass, using the grass as an energy source to live and move around. Thus the grass, though indirectly, provides a means of kinetic energy that the cows use to move around and graze in the meadow.
Chlorophyll converts the sun's energy within the grass so the grass can grow. The, cows convert the grass into energy by digesting the grass.
Anywhere grass grows such as grassland, a field, meadow or hillside.
"le pré" is a meadow, a place for cows to graze.
A pasture is where the horses graze. A paddock is an enclosed yard where they are exercised.
Grass lands or pasture areas.
Pasturage (modern spelling pâturage or paturage) is a meadow or prairie, a open field where the grass grows and where animals graze it.
Plants convert the sun's energy into their leaves, roots, stems, flowers and fruit through photosynthesis. Organisms eat the plants, and through the process of respiration use the stored energy to conduct their everyday activities. Additionally, some energy is lost as heat. In all, the organism uses about 90 percent of the stored plant's energy. After several steps in the food chain, no energy is left to recycle.
Because ants treat aphids as cows - protect them from predators, graze them on plants and milk them for a sweet liquid.
in early September to end of october on a Dewey morning in a field or meadow where sheep or cows graze and there is plenty of poo as it has fertiziled the land
Graze.
The homophone of "graze" is "greys."