There is no magic number for how often a newborn should be fed, but on average, breast- and bottle-fed babies are fed every 2-3 hours or so. The two main goals of feeding are to replace the fluids that the baby loses throughout the day (in urine, sweat, etc.) and to provide them with enough calories so that they grow adequately. Some reference numbers might help:
* Breast milk and formulas have about 20 calories per ounce * "Growing adequately" means gaining 20 grams of weight per day
* To grow 20 grams a day requires about 100 calories per kilogram of infant weight per day So for example, a 4-kilogram (9-pound) baby should be getting about 400 calories each day. If there are 20 calories in each ounce of breast milk, then that baby needs 400 / 20 = 20 ounces of formula each day to gain adequate weight. Generally this is split up into 6-10 feeds each day, meaning that feeds happen every 2-3 hours, and at each feed, the baby is consuming about 2-3 ounces.
3 times a day
2 or 3 times.
About every 2 hours.
A three-month-old baby should eat about 6-8 times a day to ensure proper nutrition and growth.
4
6 times a day
baby robins eat 43 feet of worms a day
As many times as itneeds to.
Twice a day.
as many times as u showa
they eat 3 times a day or 4 they are mosly like a human
It doesn't matter really many times a day you eat, it does matter how much and what you eat. To gain weight you need to eat above you RDA in calories!