A foal.
The term "horse for sale" is used in horse trading. It general means there is not a set price on the horse and the buyer should contact the seller to get more details.
If it is under four years old, it is called a colt. (The general term for a baby horse is a foal, NOT colt! Colt is a young male horse!)If it has been castrated, it is considered a gelding, regardless of age.If it is 4 years old or older and has not been castrated/gelded, it is called a stallion.Likewise, a young female horse is called a filly, and a mature female horse (4 years old or older) is a mare. There is no technical term for a female horse that has been marbled (equivalent of spayed.)
a young goat is called a kid
= a foal (general term used for female and males)
There is a feminine and masculine term for a young horse. A young female horse is referred to as a filly. A young male horse is a colt.
A baby boy horse is called a Colt. A foal is a general term referring to a baby horse. A filly is a baby girl horse
Foal is the term used to describe a horse less then one year old .
'colt' is the term used for a young (up to 3 years old) male horse or pony - before it is gelded.
Yes. Filly is the term used for a young female horse.
A foal is a newly born horse of either sex. Colt is a young male horse, Filly is a young female horse. Usually by 2-3 years of age, the term for a young male is either stallion or stud, or if "fixed" or castrated) they are then called a gelding. A female is generally called a mare after her 2-3 year.
A young horse is a foal; a young female horse is a filly.
A "colt" is a young, male horse. A "stud" is a farm where stallions live, and typically reproduce. "Stud colt" is a phrase often improperly used to describe young male horses. The proper term would be to simply call the horse a "colt." Similar to this incorrect phrase is "filly colt," which is essentially a "girl boy." A filly is a young female horse. There is no need to attach the word colt to the description, because a colt is a male. So, use the term "colt" for a young male horse, and "filly" for a young female horse.