Cows do not give birth every month. They give birth once a year or ever 11 months. As such the question has no merit.
Any time of the year, or any month, depending on when the cow was bred.
A cow is generally and usually expected to give birth only once a year. However cows can give birth to calves once every 11 months. Occasionally a cow will give birth to a calf 10 months after her previous parturition, but that is quite rare.
You cannot give birth to a cow. It's simply anatomically and genetically impossible.
Yes. A cow has a gestation period of around 9 months (~285 days) and has a two to three month rest before being bred again, in which she will calve again at around the same time the following year.
A springer or springing cow.
Breed her regularly, like 90 days after calving so that she'll give birth every year around the same time of year. Breeding can be by exposing her to a bull or artificially inseminating her.
What kind of question is this?? A cow has already given birth, so there's no need to give her anything to make her give birth faster. This is a poorly worded question, and confusing at that.
It could mean that a cow is ready to give birth.
No.
This is a really odd question, because, logically, a cow only gives birth once to a calf. In her lifetime she will give birth to over 10 calves.
No. Cows only give birth to other cows (i.e., calves), not humans.
Baby cows.... Aka Calfs