Eggs never come out of eggs--what are you talking about? The purpose of an egg is to protect something soft that is not an egg, so that wouldn't even make any sense. Gently, gently... This may be English as a second language manglish and a confusion with semantics and terminology and thinking hatch needs a noun and getting mixed up with eggs, chickens and hens. I think what is meant is: why the eggs you buy, laid by hens, don't hatch when you take them home. If they are battery cage eggs, then they aren't fertilised. Hens/chooks lay eggs whether or not they are mating with roosters. If you are actually buying eggs in a free range environment that has roosters or have your own hens and rooster and the eggs are fertilised, they won't develop unless a chook becomes broody and commits to sitting on them and keeping them at a constant temperature, apart from quick trips for water. The most productive hens have had broodiness bred out of them because while they are sitting on the eggs, they don"t lay any more eggs for some time. but classic old breeds still behave like real, motherly chooks. A lot of people keep little broody bantams to hatch their other chooks' eggs. Personally, I prefer to keep my splenetic rage for people who eat or hunt whales - someone who may be speaking in a second, new language, who genuinely doesn't know the reason why eggs bought don't hatch and may be quite young is deserving of a little more compassion, as indeed, are the whales.
Eggs laid by birds are typically unfertilized and do not contain embryos to develop into new organisms. Only fertilized eggs, formed by the union of sperm and egg, have the potential to develop into offspring when incubated properly. Birds need to mate in order for the eggs to be fertilized.
"Laid" is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to lay," which means to put something down. "Laid" is used when referring to an action that has already happened, while "lay" is used in the present tense. For example, "She laid the book on the table yesterday" or "She is laying the book on the table now."
I just got home and went to lie down in my bed.This is not present perfectPresent perfect is - have/has + past participle - the past participle for lay is laidShe has laid on her bed all day.They have laid the foundations for the new library.The hens have laid eggs all winter.I have laid the table, what shall I do now?
If by "lay" is meant the present indicative and infinitive form of "to lay", a transitive verb, the past participle is "laid". "Lay", however, is also the past indicative form of the irregular and intransitive verb "to lie", and if that is the meaning of "lay", it, like other past tense verbs, has no participle of its own; the past participle of this meaning of "lie" is lain.
Using an apostrophe after the last s in a word shows possession. The snakes' eggs were laid in a nest.
The correct term is "laid off."
All eggs that are laid hatch outside the body
Eggs laid on land are hatched on the land and eggs laid in the water hatch in the water. *o*
Most ducks will stay on the nest and incubate their eggs for 27 days. They will not start incubating until the last egg has been laid, usually laying one egg per day.
wait for them to hatch
They usually hatch 7 days later after they were laid.
they will not hatch now dont think they where fertilised
yes but sometimes the male will eat the eggs but if you dont put a male in there the eggs will still hatch but in more time.
Survival of the species ! Many eggs laid in water are eaten by fish and other animals. Laying hundreds or perhaps thousands of eggs increases the chance that at least some of them will survive to hatch out.
The act of laying the egg is natures way of ensuring that IF the hen is mated she can produce chicks. In the wild a hen may not have a rooster available at all times but will be capable of reproduction on the chance meeting of a rooster.
4-6They usually lay between 4-6 eggs per egg laying periods.
of course they will not hatch they need they're warmth from their mothers.
Type your answer here...6 weeks