Newborn to four years old is a filly, five and up is a mare.
Female horses are called mares, female foals are called fillies.
Yes
A young female, not yet mature (under 4 years old) is called a filly. A female older than 4 is called a mare.
a young female hore is called a filly and a young male horse is called a colt
yes!! all horses are born with hooves
A group of young female horses is called a "herd of fillies".
Depends if that foal is male or female. Colts, which are young male horses, grow up to either be stallions (if intact) or geldings (if castrated) when they reach adulthood. Fillies, which are young female horses, grow up to be mares when they reach adulthood.
Mare - female horse Stallion - male horse which can breed Gelding - male horse that cannot breed Colt - young male Filly - young female
An adult female is called a mare. An adult castrated male is called a gelding. An adult male that is uncastrated is a stallion. A young horse male or female is called a foal. A young female (under 2) is a filly. A young male is a colt. There are also names for young horses as they grow. A foal that still nurses from the mother is a suckling. A foal that no longer nurses is a weanling. At his/her first birthday it's a yearling.
A mare! A female horse is a mare, a male is a stallion, basically. However, a "baby" horse is a foal, a young male is a colt and a young female a filly. If a male horse is castrated it is then known as a gelding.I hope you were talking about horses - mare means sea in several languages, and that's a whole new topic.
They are the offspring of female horses and male donkeys.
Male horses (Stallion if over 4 years and colt if under four years) Can help to create a foal with a mare (female horse over four, filly for a female under four.) But they themselves cannot carry a foal as they do not have wombs. only female horses can carry the young and give birth to them.