Grass seeds
Chickens can be fed seeds to make them breed.
Once in the morning and once in the evening.
The basic answer is, yes - they can. However, just like us, they have preferences and while some will eat them, some won't. Sunflower seeds should not be fed as the main diet - a good quality layer's mash, or pellets, should be fed (assuming that you want good quality eggs and healthy chickens!), with mixed corn, sunflower (and/ or other "bird" seeds) etc as treats.
Small rodents, baby chickens etc.
corn fed chickens are those chickens who are fed with baby corns or corns to eat. corn fed chicken meat has a light yellow colour due to the corns they eat.
decaying human flesh
My chickens love apple cores with seeds. In fact, my fenced in chicken run is also my orchard. To reduce the number of insects attracted to felled fruit, and to clean up the fruit that does fall, I put my chickens to work. They will eat any and all the fruit and it benefits them nutritionally. If you are concerned about arsenic in apple seeds, consider that there is arsenic naturally in the ground, and because of that there is arsenic in the plants raised in that soil.
No, you do not have to mix layers mash with water. Layers mash is designed to be fed dry to chickens. Water should be provided separately for chickens to drink.
Baby chicks should be fed a specially formulated chick starter or chick feed. Laying hens need high-protein laying mash supplemented with crushed oyster shells for added calcium. Roosters and meat chickens need a good grain mix, such as broiler feed or chicken scratch. All chickens will do well with some access to grass and bugs as well as produce scraps
No, chickens can safely be fed beet leaves, as well as the roots.
No eggs are not vegetables. They are part of the meat group in the food pyramid.
No. In Chocolate it has eggs...chickens will smell the chocolate then leave it for the ants to eat it.