If chicks are not fed every 4 hours from when they are born to when they are a week old, they die, and if you don't keep the eggs at a certain temperature (90 degrees Fahrenheit) they chicks either die when they hatch or don't hatch.
Incorrect I'm just a chick who recently hatched from the egg.
Cracking is correct, as in cracking an egg.
You can explain to the child that a food egg, like the ones we eat, comes from a hen and is just an egg that doesn't have a baby chick inside. In contrast, a baby chick egg has a tiny chick developing inside it, which will eventually hatch into a baby chicken if it is kept warm and safe. So, one is for eating, while the other is for growing a new chick!
No Inside the shell are two membranes,the inner membrane directs blood flow to the chick and the outer membrane retains moisture. The chicks pipping from the inside with the egg tooth is done slowly and controls the ceasing of that blood flow. Done Too quickly and the chick will die. Unless the chick has already made the first tiny hole to the outside there is no way you can tell where the chicks head is located, opening the shell at its tail will have no good results ,only bad. Cracking the shell will result in the death of an otherwise possibly viable chick.
No only when a male dove is there to fertilize the egg otherwise its just like the eggs we eat.
There will be kind of pocket in the egg which contains enough oxygen for the chick to breathe in the egg for 21 days.
It is the yolk that provides the nutrients for an unhatched chick.
The son of an egg is a chick.
Physical
The chick grows in the albumen (the white of the egg) and feeds off the yolk.
They keep the egg cratled in the father's feet
beating the egg, cracking the egg open, and whisking the egg.