That would be a feral horse. The majority of so called 'Wild' horses are actually just feral.
Not exactly. A semi-wild horse is a horse that retains much of its "wildness" but is still raised by humans. Bucking horses are semi-wild horses, for instance.
The Friesian horse is a domesticated breed of horse.
A horse that has one parent that is wild or some people say A domesticated horse that has become wild againThis can mean that the horse will let you pet or brush it but may not let you ride it.
Przewalski wild horse
It is a male horse that is not domesticated.
It would be called "feral" as would its offspring, because any horse living in the wild that was once domesticated, or its ancestors were domesticated, is not wild, but feral. Yes, technically. It was once tame, and so was its ancestors, so it would not be considered wild.
No. A horse is a horse and behaves like a horse regardless if it's wild, feral or domesticated.
A feral organism is one which was once controlled, domesticated or cultivated and has become uncontrolled, wild or uncultivated. For instance a feral horse is one which may have escaped from a farm where it was domesticated.
Feral horses are horses that have been tame or domesticated but have escaped and returned to the wild. An exception is Przewalski's Horse a breed of wild horse that was subjected to a breeding program and then purposefully returned to the wild. These horses have never been tamd or domesticated.
if you mean "feral"....it is a dog that has returned to "wild" or is no longer domesticated...stray dogs & cats after enough generations of not having regular human contact become non-domesticated again or Feral
parrots and budgies
When she comes back in heat. In the wild they don't wait, so I don't see why it would be different in domesticated situations.