They are cattle- they low, snort and stomp.
I think I've heard the phrase "lowing of the oxen"
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Yes, I think what you may be referring to is a Biblical quotation:
(KJV) 1 Samuel 15:14
"And Samuel said, What meaneth then this bleating of the sheep in mine ears, and the lowing of the oxen which I hear?"
Oxen make a low, deep Mooooooooooo-ing sound, so says a common dictionary site online - under "lowing", when the word "low" or "lowing" is used as a verb of the sentence in question.
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yes
Moo
Bellow
bellow
They are cattle- they low, snort and stomp.
No. It just made it easier to control the oxen as they were being used to plow fields and for the oxen to pull the plow, and it made it more efficient to be able to use more than one ox to use for plowing. But it never made oxen plow fields faster than horses do. Horses are always going to be faster and more high-stepping than an ox will ever be.
A pair of oxen is called a team of oxen or a yoke or oxen.
Oxen or Mules.
No. You are asking about the YOKE, not the collar. The yoke kept the oxen together without needing chains to keep the oxen together like with horses, plus it helped have better control of the oxen's heads. The yoke never made the oxen work faster than horses, because no matter what horses will always be faster than oxen, but it just helped with better control.
No. Ox is singular, oxen is plural.
Ox is not the plural of oxen. Ox is singular; oxen is plural.
oxen
oxen rhymes with nothing.nothing rhymes with oxen everyone should know that
Yes oxen have bones.
she is full of oxen
Depends on the breed of these oxen!