Cows are mature female bovines that have had at least one or two calves.
Bulls are intact male bovines used primarily to breed cows
Oxen are cattle (primarily horned castrated male cattle, but can also include females as well, on occasion) that are trained and used for draft work.
A dry cow or a heifer. Other "cows" include bulls, oxen, bullocks and steers.
Cows are always female. A male cow is a bull, and a calf is born of a bull father and cow mother. Technically, an ox is a castrated male, but any bovine draught annimal is commonly called 'ox' or 'oxen'.
No. Oxen, cattle, cows, bulls, steers and heifers have one stomach with four chambers, not four stomachs.
Yes, there are. The female is referred to as a cow, the male as a bull. and the young is called a calf.
Beef comes from cattle, be they steers, heifers, cows, or bulls.
Bulls can become oxen when they get castrated and are trained to pull carts, wagons, plows, etc. However most breeding bulls stay bulls, and oxen are trained at a young age, when they are castrated when they are on their mommas and not yet trained as oxen.
Oxen are also known as steer(s), castrated bulls.
Horses, Pigs, Ducks, Sheep, Cows, Geese, Bees, Goats, Bulls, Oxen, Mice, Rats, Llamas, and Cats.
Male cows don't exist. There are only cows and bulls, no female cows, male cows, male bulls, female bulls. With that said, only cows (which are, by definition, mature female bovines that have given birth to at least one calf) are ones that have cervixes, bulls do not. Bulls have their major reproductive organs close to or mostly outside their body, cows have theirs inside.
In my opinion the word for cows and bulls in a group is called a herd.
All bulls are male. Cows are female, mostly.
Yes they do because all cows are girls and all bulls are boys