Only the molars, but not the front incisors, no. If you find what looks like a cow skeleton--or a partly decomposed skeleton with the skull fully exposed--with front and bottom incisors or front teeth and flat molars, then you're obviously looking at a horse skeleton, not a cow. Horses or any equine (mules, hinnies, donkeys and zebras) are the only mammals on Earth that, as strictly herbivores, have upper incisors.
Beef cows = beef cows, so yes, obviously.
no
Hamburgers = beef beef = cows Steak is from cows. So yes, cows are eaten.
Angus cows are beef cows, not dairy cows. Holsteins are dairy cows, not beef cows, which is where we get the majority of our milk from.
Beef comes from cows.
Both (they drink milk there as well as eat beef) but there are more beef cattle.
Yes, it is different to a cows as cows have one instead of top fron teeth, horses have them between the incisors and the premolars.
Beef comes from cattle, be they steers, heifers, cows, or bulls.
Dairy cows have larger udders than beef cows, are typically a bit thinner, and tend to have a less blocky appearance than most beef cows. Dairy cows also have more feminine characteristics to them than beef cows do.
Cows.
cows
Beef in the form of a steak, roast, or a hamburger.