Are you asking why do sows go into heat easier than cows, or something else entirely? It is not entirely certain what you mean by "easily" or possibly "easier" unless an explanation can be had to better understand this question.
1. The sow's uterine horns are much longer than a cow's to accomodate for more than one offspring 2. The cervix is shaped like a corkscrew in the sow and is longer and thinner than a cow's 4. The sow's uterine tissue has endometrial folds; the cow's uterine tissue has caruncles and intercaruncular endometrium. 5. The myometrium is thinner in the sow than the cow 6. Both the sow and the cow have a bicornuate uterus, but the sow's uterine horns are highly developed (longer) than a cow's (see #1). 7. The sow has a mesosalpinx forming an ovarian bursa over the ovaries, but the cow does not have this. 8. Cows have a fornix vagina where sperm is stored; sows do not. 9. Cows have a cranial vagina with folds before the cervix; sows do not. 10. Cows have pronounced cervical rings; sows have what is called interdigitating prominences which is forms a sort of corkscrew passage in the cervix (see #2). 11. The corpus lutea is more prominant in the sow than in the cow. They are found outside the ovarian membrane in the sow; the corpus lutea are found inside the ovarian membrane.
it rhymes with cow.
There is no such thing called a sow cow. It is just the salchow.
A cow
A mother cow could also be referred to as the "dam."
cow, sow
No, a sow cow and a salchow are not the same thing. A sow cow refers to a female pig, while a salchow is a figure skating jump. The two terms belong to entirely different contexts, one related to agriculture and the other to sports.
Ewe
A sow's counterpart might be a cow bovine, nanny goat, mare, doe and so forth.
No. A sow is a female pig or hog (or even a bear, raccoon, etc.), not a domestic bovine.
Samhainophobia is pronounced as "sow-in-oh-fobia." It is a combination of the Gaelic word "Samhain" (sow-in) and the suffix "phobia," meaning fear.
No. A sow is a female pig or hog (or even a bear, raccoon, etc.), not a domestic bovine.