"I don't thinks that's been done before; it seems you get naming rights.
woodle and polf are two that spring readily to mind, I would go with polf personally"
Actually there was a study in 1976 that crossed poodles and wolves to look at coat colors and texture. They called them "puwos". Zeitschrift fuer Saeugetierkunde, 41(3):147-167. BA 62:60461 ZR 113(19):148
pit wolf
Impossible.
It would be difficult to say exactly how big a cross between these dogs would be. Australian cattle dogs are a little bit bigger than Staffordshire bull terriers. A cross between these two would probably be between 20 to 25 kilograms.
Nothing, it is impossible to breed two bulls together. However, when either of these is a female the offspring would just be called a cross bred animal. A similar circumstance is when you cross a Hereford with a Charolais.
A young cow is called a heifer, and a young bull is called a young bull or a yearling bull if it is between the ages of 10 to 18 months of age.
Bull terriers are a few breeds. Mainly a cross between the, now extinct, English white terrier and a bull dog.
That cross does NOT produce a blue calf. This cross will give a GREY or smokey-grey calf, never blue. The resulting cross would simply be called a Char-Angus cross or Angus-Char or Angus-Charolais cross.
ASTs and APBT are not the same breed. People commonly lump them in together but they are not the same breed. The only dog breed that can be accurately called a Pit Bull is the American Pit Bull Terrier.
Like a cross between a pit bull and a boxer?
A mutt.
A baby bull is called a bull calf. Another good name for a baby bull would be Roscoe.
The cross's name would be considered an F1 Brangus-Hereford cross. The colour would be black with a white face.
Probably about 10-12 years.