A springer or springing cow.
A pregnant cow who gives birth is a mother.
A Springer cow refers to a pregnant cow expected to give birth soon or has recently calved. They are typically in the late stages of pregnancy or have just given birth. A regular cow is just a general term for a cow that is not specifically pregnant or in the immediate post-calving period.
A heavily pregnant cow, or a long-bred cow. Or, a cow that is expecting soon.
An open or barren cow.
From an auction mart or from a dairy farm that are selling calves, or from a cow that is pregnant and is nearly ready to give birth.
Copulation or conception. This occurs when the bull ejaculates sperm into the cow, which encourages a series of events that allows a cow to become pregnant and give birth to a calf over 9 months later.
Cows are typically bred once a year, with a gestation period of about 9 months. This means a cow can be pregnant once a year and give birth to one calf annually.
It should only be a matter of a couple hours.
What kind of question is this?? A cow has already given birth, so there's no need to give her anything to make her give birth faster. This is a poorly worded question, and confusing at that.
It could mean that a cow is ready to give birth.
Usually one, but occasionally she will drop twins, and even rarer still, triplets or quadruplets. But the average cow always drops one calf a year.
No. Cows only give birth to other cows (i.e., calves), not humans.