Wool comes from sheep, the farmers shave it off and weave it together.
Fleece-bearing animals are the source of wool fibres.
A wool sock is made of wool, the source of which is animal fleece.
A wool sock is what it sounds like... A sock made from wool... You get wool from a sheep.
the yak is a source of wool and milk mainly...!!
Animals that grow fleece are the source for the raw material that is made into wool.
Your answer depends on the source of the fleece used to make up the wool. Some wool is very coarse: other wool is very soft.
When purchasing a wool coat one should look out for the source of the wool. If one is environmentally conscious then one may, for example, wish to buy a coat made partly with recycled wool.
Yak -- like all fleece-bearing animals -- produces the source material for wool. Yak wool is extremely fine and soft. You can read more, below.
No. Turkeys grow feathers, not fleece, which is required as a source material for wool. Unless you mean the country Turkey, in which case, and depending on who 'us' might be, it is possible that you are provided wool from Turkey.
Because Australia is the leading supplier of wool in the world so it is important as a source of income for Australian people.
Test your wool for micron diameter and breed the finer micron animals together or source a ram with a finer micron.
An alpaca's wool is called a fleece or fiber because it's finer than most wool. it's the 3rd most expensive fiber in the world.Another AnswerAlpaca wool is called Alpaca wool. Wool is a generic word used to describe fibre spun from fleece, regardless of the type of fleece-bearning animal that produces it. Alpaca, then, used as a descriptor, modifies the word wool and specifies the source of the fleece: thus -- Alpaca wool.