They eat legumes, like alfalfa, laspedenza, trefoil, cicer milkvetch and clover, but these are primarily found on pasture or in hay. All other feeds fed to cattle, from grain to silage to hay, is all made from grasses. Ninety-eight percent of grains fed to cattle come from species of grass that has been modified to produce high volumes of seeds. These grasses are barley, wheat, corn, rye, triticale, sorghum and millet, to name a few. Even though most people believe that the feeding of grain to cattle is not feeding them grass because they are being fed the seeds portion of the plant and not the vegetative portion, these grains still come from grasses.
So, ultimately, the answer is pretty well no.
grass
No.
"Moo cows" are, essentially, cows that moo.
cows eat grass
Cows
No. Cows EAT grass. They do not "have" grass.
French cows eat grass.
Cows
Cows will eat long grass. Haven't you ever heard, "The cow's in the corn?" Corn is a tall grass.
Cows don't eat animals, they eat grass they are herbivores.
yes all cows moo.
humans....we eat cows and cows eat grass...