A herd.
No, a group of cows is called a herd of cows.
A group of cows is called a herd, not a flock. Flocks are a group of birds or sheep. This is just a group of cows.
Far less than there are cows.
Dairy cows have larger udders than beef cows, are typically a bit thinner, and tend to have a less blocky appearance than most beef cows. Dairy cows also have more feminine characteristics to them than beef cows do.
Selective breeding, selecting for bulls and cows that have better milking ability, breeding those animals together and culling out the cows that have less than average or inferior milking ability. Bulls with less-than-ideal milking ability are not used on such cows.
Cows typically gather in herds rather than flocks. A herd of cows refers to a group of domesticated cattle that travel, feed, and live together. The term "flock" is more commonly used to describe a group of birds or sheep.
There are none. Grass fed cows produce less butterfat. Therefore there is more waste (buttermilk which is disgarded) than product than normal fed cows.
cows eye are bigger and less vision than cats. cats can see through dark
A quarter of a group, possibly.
Less.
Prices vary on age, sex and weight. Older cull cows cost less than 3-in-1's and bred cows; bologna bulls cost less than registered bulls; bred heifer cost less than bred cows; feeder steers cost more than feeder heifers; dairy calves are least expensive of the lot. Finally, registered cattle always cost more than commercial cattle.
Yes but they are less defined than the ideal bovine cow.