foal
Its called a Mare
A stallion's mate is typically called a mare.
A male wild horse is called a stallion; there is usually one mature stallion with a small herd of mares and the mare's reproductively immature offspring. However, wild horse bands are not led by the male - they are lead by the dominant mare.
Stallion is, by definition a Male. A Female horse is called a Mare.
The most general answer for the foals born to a mare or stallion are as follows. Dam: is the word for a mare or female horse producing foals. The foals she produces are called her "produce". Sire: is the word for a stallion or male horse who has bred mares. The foals produced by a stallion are call his "get". (The stallion "gets" the mares in foal so the foals produced by him are his "get".)
Horses reproduce sexually, with a mare and a stallion mating to produce offspring. After mating, the fertilized egg develops in the mare's uterus for around 11 months before she gives birth to a foal. The foal will then grow and mature into an adult horse.
The offspring of a stallion (or a mare) are called 'get' or foals. As an example: ' The bay stallion throws some nice get/ foals.' Get is an old term not much in use today so foal is often used in it's place.
No. A mating between a horse stallion and a zebra mare is called a hebra or horbra. A zebra stallion and horse mare produce a zorse.
The female horse is called a Mare
An adult horse is either a mare or a stallion. A male adult is a stallion, and a female horse is a mare.
The feminine form of stallion is mare. Stallions are male horses, while mares are female horses.
A stallion donkey is called a Jack. A jack will try to breed a mare, but the mare may not let him cover her, even if she is in season (ovulating).