they make sound which contain vibrations and have very high pitched voices which make sounds like cocok and others
BY MICHAEL
The likely term is a "cockadoodling rooster" (crowing roosters are said to sound like cock-a-doodle-doo).
Some gender nouns for birds are:cob, pen (swan)cock, chantelle (partridge)cock, hen (blue jay)cock, hen (crow)cock, hen (dove)cock, hen (finch)cock, hen (guinea fowl)cock, hen (gull)cock, hen (heron)cock, hen (hummingbird)cock, hen (lark)cock, hen (lyrebird)cock, hen (magpie)cock, hen (nightingale)cock, hen (ostrich)cock, hen (parrot)cock, hen (pheasant)cock, hen (pigeon)cock, hen (quail)drake, hen (duck)gander, goosepeacock, peahenrooster, hen (chicken)tercel, falcontiercel, hen (hawk)tom, hen (turkey)Many types of birds do not have specific gender nouns, for example, penguins or woodpeckers are simply called male and female.
Cock's opposite gender is hen.
The ISBN of A Sound Like Someone Trying Not to Make a Sound is 0385746806.
There is no antonym, the opposite gender would be hen.
they make sound which contain vibrations and have very high pitched voices which make sounds like cocok and others BY MICHAEL
Commonly called cock-a-doodle-doo in English. It could also be: cock-crow.
the light
Male and female pigeons make very similar sounds, even during courtship. The only sex-specific sound is that of the male, a soft rolling hoo that is made while he circles the female to impress her.
The figurative language used in "The strain of strutting chanticleer cry Cock-a-doodle-doo!" is onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia is where words imitate the sound they make, like "cock-a-doodle-doo" imitating the sound of a rooster crowing.
Cock
crow
Cockerel.
Same as any other chicken, although they do crow a lot more and make the 'cock-a-doodle-doo' noise
In English it is generally accepted that the sound is 'cock-a-doodle-do'. In French 'cocorico' In Dutch 'kukeleku' In German ' kikeriki In Turkish ' kukuriku
the sound of the word is geegee
The sound a rooster makes is typically spelled as "cock-a-doodle-doo."