A herd.
A herd.
A group of 3 cows would be called a "herd of cows". It is a very small herd, but it is technically a herd. Anytime you have a group of cattle it is called a herd.
When you group things, what you call them depends on what you are grouping. Some examples: * a group of playing cards = a deck * a group of flowers = a bouquet * a group of cows = a herd * a group of birds = a flock ** If you tell me what items you are grouping, I can help you with what to call the group.
I would call it a "space-bound herd of dairy cows."
group of cows = herd listened = heard
The correct collective term for a group of crows is a "parliment of crows" whereas a common term for a group of geese would be a "gaggle of geese"
In my opinion the word for cows and bulls in a group is called a herd.
Australian's terms for cows and cattle are pretty much the same as what North Americans and British call them: cows.
I couldn't really find the answer, but I came up with several names for a group of cows: drift, drove, herd, mob
Cows. They speak English there you know....
A group of cows is called a herd, not a flock. Flocks are a group of birds or sheep. This is just a group of cows.
The usual animal group, or collective noun, that applies to cows would be a herd (of cattle). Female moose are called cows, too, and a group of moose is called a herd as well. Female whales are also called cows, so another applicable collective noun would be a pod (of whales).