When cattleappear to be chewing they are doing exactly that, although I think you are referring to when cattle are chewing their "cud". Cattle regurgitate a small portion of food, known as their cud, and chew on it.
no
I never see a cow eat with its mouth open so I’m thinking no and I never seen a cow before so I don’t know
Cud. Cows regergitate grass and it is call cud. Hence cows chew their cud.
No.
partly digested food that cows and other ruminants return to the mouth, after it has passed into the first stomach, to chew again as an aid to digestion
Origin: In the 1500's, a lot of people owned cows and sheep. These are animals that chew their cuds (food that is spit up from the stomach to the mouth and chewed again). It is a long process.
No.
No. They chew partly digested forage (like grass, hay and silage), not "spit."
Cows chew the cud, which is a partly digested bolus of plant material she had swallowed whole earlier.
Cows don't chew cheese. They're herbivores, they chew grass and hay and such, and chew, when they're sitting around and relaxed, partly digested forage matter that they regurgitated from their reticulo-rumen tract called cud. Milk is produced from cows (normally for their calves, but in the case of dairy cows, for human consumption), and the fatty content of milk is made into cheese and other creamy dairy products like ice cream, yogurt, and butter.
Theres a Cow Farm.... Theres Gonna Be Cows Outside!
Theres a Cow Farm.... Theres Gonna Be Cows Outside!