Sheep are ruminants and they chew their cud (which is grass they have eaten that has been slightly digested in the rumen and they cough it up to rechew it) to make the particle size smaller so that it is more easily digested by the microbes in their gut.
no, although pigs are a part of the livestock they do not need to chew cud. this is becaue they only have one stomach whareas animals such as sheep goats and cows chew cud this is because there stomach consists of four diffrent chambers.
Chickens do not have hooves at all and do not chew their cud. They are however considered to be Kosher animals according to Jewish tradition.
This is called lying down, cattle do not sit down as their bodies are not built to sit. They lie down as they are resting, cattle will only chew their cud when they are relaxed. They will also digest standing up as well.
No, the Bible is not wrong. The Bible was not written in English. The Old Testament was written in Hebrew. So it is to Hebrew that we should go to understand this conundrum.The interpretation of the phrase "chewing the cud" depends on the Hebrew words used for chewing and for cud. The Hebrew word for cud is gêrâh. This does not really mean cud, but actually is a broader term, meaning something that has been swallowed. Thus, if your child swallowed a penny, but was able to bring it up again, this could be described as gêrâh - though it would clearly not be what we understood by the English term cud. The Hebrew word that has been translated as chewing is âlâh, which actually means "to ascend" or "to raise." Therefore, the Hebrew phrase could really be interpreted as "the rabbit raises what it has swallowed … ." Does this broader phrase allow us to classify rabbits with cows, sheep and goats? Yes, it does. Cows, sheep and goats are ruminants. That is to say, they literally chew the cud, in the more narrow sense that the English phrase uses. The key issue is that they are re-eating something. Their first swallowing did not complete the digestion process. Rabbits do something very similar. Rabbits actually produce two different sorts of fecal droppings. First, they produce a light brown dropping. This is actually partially digested food. The rabbits eat these droppings, which is why you might not often notice them. They re-digest these droppings, and then produce their second, darker colored droppings. In this way, the rabbits are raising and re-digesting something which they have already swallowed. Therefore, they fit completely within the terms of the broader Hebrew phrase, even though they cannot be said to "chew the cud" quite like cows do.So the Bible is correct in its definitions, as always. There are no mistakes in Scripture, even though there can often be misunderstandings.
Oh honey, chickens don't have cud to eat in the first place. Cud is regurgitated food that some animals chew again for better digestion, like cows. Chickens are more into pecking at grains and bugs, not chewing the same food twice. So, nope, chickens don't eat cud, they have better things to do with their time.
Undulates mammals have hooves and chew cud as cattle .
Deer, Cows, Sheep. All animals that chew the cud.
Deer, Cows, Sheep. All animals that chew the cud.
Deer, Cows, Sheep. All animals that chew the cud.
Sheep, goats, deer, cattle, etc.
Cud is regurgitated food mostly in cattle that chew it up again and again to break down hay, grain, etc. Animals that chew their cud include cattle, goats, sheep, giraffes, bison, yaks, water buffalo, deer, camels, alpacas, llamas, wildebeest, antelope, pronghorn, and nilgai.
to sleep (something that they do around 15% of the time) Also to rest, chew cud
Yes. Bongos chew their cud.
No. Pigs are not ruminant; none of them chew cud.
Chewing the cud means to sit back, relax and loiter around. Cud-chewers include all those animals that are Ruminants, which include deer, cattle, bison, buffalo, sheep, goats, moose, elk, antelope, etc.
Any animal that eats grass e.g Sheep,cow,goat,horse,bull,deer ect .
No, deer do not chew cud. Cud chewing is a digestive process seen in ruminant animals such as cows, sheep, and goats, where they regurgitate and re-chew their food to aid in digestion. Deer are not classified as ruminants; they are considered "pseudoruminants" because they have a three-chambered stomach instead of the four-chambered stomach seen in true ruminants.