Their mouths (beaks)
'Peck'
yeah.. they use their beaks for that.
(The Yellow-Orange thing on their face) and their claws (which is on their feet)
'scratch'
They learn to scratch and peck the dirt for food learning from their mother .
Nouns related to chickens: hen, rooster, egg, chick, feather, coop, cluck. Adjectives to describe chickens: feathered, fluffy, noisy.Verbs to describe chickens' actions: cluck, crow, peck, scratch.
no
Some do...
noway your alot bigger than the chickens but some do peck on your toes
If chickens scratch booties with pickles, cocks scratch booties with cookies.
Chickens peck at each other to establish who has dominance over the other. It is called the pecking order. Sick or injured birds offer changes to the established order and their place on the flock hierarchy. The aggression by the other chickens is showing they are moving up at the expense of the weaker bird.
Chickens are very active birds. When they are not sleeping or setting they eat. They will peck at everything hoping it is food and even when it is not they will keep pecking at it hoping there is food within. If you watch them carefully they often peck something not edible and toss it away. Chickens live by the rule "if it moves, grab it before another chicken does"
It means that you are reduced to meager circumstances, as if you have to get out and scratch for your living in the dirt with the chickens.
I would wait until the younger chickens are at least a few months old. The older chickens will peck the younger ones, but they will stop at some point.
Chickens use there feet to kick up dirt, and or dig a small hole. Then they use there beak and peck at the dirt for small bugs and sometimes worms.
If it ain't black and white peck scratch and bite