Some type of disease or physical damage to the gonads.
Yes. When a rooster is killed, or dies of natural causes, it will no longer crow. You're welcome.
From what I've heard and from what has been been said recently, there is an ingredient in hand sanitizer that makes males sterile. Hand sanitizer is known to kill bacteria but what is in the sanitizer gets absorbed into the body, which is what causes men to become sterile.
A rooster crows to establish its territory, communicate with other roosters, and signal the start of a new day. The crowing is triggered by a combination of internal factors such as hormones and external factors like the presence of light.
The possessive form for the noun rooster is rooster's.
It depends on why the man is sterile. There are many causes. If he has had a vasectomy, an operation to make him sterile, that operation can now be reversed for a majority of men, if they want to go through the hassle and expense. If a man is sterile for some other reason, there are many possible medical reasons and many possible treatments. Only a fertility expert knows all about it.
When they get the injections from a rooster's comb, the rooster does have to be killed. They can get rid of a rooster's comb without killing it but it has to be on the first day that it is born.
the flower is sterile
If a sterile field becomes "contaminated" with a sterile solution, the field remains sterile.
rooster
sterile gloves
The plural of rooster is roosters.
This is an example of a logical fallacy known as post hoc ergo propter hoc, which infers causation based solely on sequence of events. In reality, the rooster crowing and the sun rising are simply correlated events that occur independently of each other.