moo?
The Cow's Head story involves a man who prays for a cow's head to eat but gets upset when his wish is granted and causes chaos in his community. It is a cautionary tale about being careful what you wish for and appreciating what you have.
Yes. Cows and horses are commonly found on rangelands, especially beef cattle (no, not the "cows" that are in feedlots, but actual beef cows), not so much dairy cattle.
Cows die anywhere and everywhere, including those that live in Sweden.
They look like actual cows.
Cows live in almost every country in the world, including Finland. So yes.
With dairy cows, yes. Other times cows (including beef cows) will moo when they are calling to their calves, or when it's feeding time, or even when they're in heat.
Yes
Roughages including hay and grass.
Yes, of course it's true.
Cows are female bovines while bulls are male bovines. Therefore, cows have a female reproductive tract including ovaries and a uterus, which a bull does not have. The bull will have a male reproductive tract including testicles and a prostate gland, which a cow does not have.
Yes, just like all animals, including humans, do.
The protagonist in "Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type" is Farmer Brown, who is facing a challenge when his cows and other farm animals start using a typewriter to communicate their demands for better living conditions.
I think you are confusing crows (large black bird) and cows (moo and give milk) Cows do not make nests anywhere, including a tall tower in downtown Paris.