A young chicken is called a chick, a pullet (young hen), or a cockerel (young rooster).
Young Chickens are called Chicks.
A really dumb rooster :-)
No matter the sex, the name for a young chicken is a chick. then when they are mature they become either a hen or a rooster.
A young rooster is called a cockerel. Male chickens under one year old are called this. After they reach their first year they are concidered an adult rooster.
Hamel, Hansel, Bobel: those are nouns. A young, less than 1 year old male chicken is called a cockerel. That's a pronoun.
A young cock, or rooster, is called a cockerel. Cockerel is a diminutive form of the word cock, which is English for male chicken. The word originates from the Old English, Old French, and Old Norse word for male chicken, which were cocc, coc, and kokkr, respectively.
A chicken.
A really dumb rooster :-)
They are usually called a cockerel.
No matter the sex, the name for a young chicken is a chick. then when they are mature they become either a hen or a rooster.
A young male chicken is a cockerel. A young female chicken is a pullet.
None, a rooster, is an adult male chicken (with the female being called a hen). Immature male chickens of less than a year's age are called cockerels.
No. A chick would be a young bird, particularly a chicken.
A baby chicken is called a chick. A female chicken that is still too young to lay eggs is called a pullet
Jessika
A young rooster is called a cockerel. Male chickens under one year old are called this. After they reach their first year they are concidered an adult rooster.
The very young, the very old and of course the male chicken which is called a rooster.
Young hens are often called pullets, but I have never heard of a bullit...