Cud is a portion of food that returns from a ruminant's stomach to the mouth to be chewed for the second time. More accurately, it is a bolus of semi-degraded food regurgitated from the reticulorumen of a ruminant. Cud is produced during the physical digestive process of rumination.
"To chew the cud" is "ruminer" "The cud" is "la panse" A cud-chewing animal is "un ruminant"
Cud is also used as the plural. Cud was coming in by the truckload. There was cud all over the place.
Cud. Cows regergitate grass and it is call cud. Hence cows chew their cud.
The homophone for "could" is "cud."
Yes. Bongos chew their cud.
A donkey is NOT a cud-chewing animal.
A "cud" is a portion of forage that is, brace yourself, regurgitated for further mastication.
Yes. The Watusi is a breed of cow, which is a ruminant, which chews cud.
No. Pigs are not ruminant; none of them chew cud.
Cud - 2009 was released on: USA: June 2009
Nothing. Cows usually don't "lose" their cud anyway.
Cud is partially digested forage. A bolus of cud is brought up from the reticulo-rumen by regurgitation; the rest of the other partially digested forage is kept in the rumen.