About 10 years old but the oldest cow is 20 years old.
An adult female that has had a calf is a cow.A young female before she has had a calf and is under three years of age is called a heifer.
a young cow This is, however, a common misspelling. The correct spelling is "heifer". It does not directly relate to age of the cow. It is actually a cow that hasn't birthed a calf. A heifer becomes a cow once she successfully delivers a calf.
The name of a baby cow is a Calf
A "cow" is a cow when that "cow" is a she and she has given birth to at least one calf.
The baby is called a calf and mother is a cow. Together they are called a cow-calf pair, or "mom and baby."
A young "male cow" (which is non-existent, by the way) is called a bullock or a young bull or, if not of weaning age, a bull calf. That is, if the so-called "male cow" is intact. If not, it is called a steer calf if castrated and is still relying on its mother's milk, or simply a steer after weaning or after it reaches around a year of age.
After it has had a calf, which is at around 2 years of age.
Yes. The only thing is that this "bull" is actually called a bull calf: the "calf" part of "bull" is dropped after the calf reaches around yearling age (~9 to 10 months of age). A cow has just as much of a chance of giving birth to a bull calf as a heifer calf. The sex or gender of her calf is determined by the sperm of the bull she was bred to, not the cow herself.
Cow. Calf came after.
It depends how long the cow lives for. Normally she will have her first calf at 2 yrs of age. And 1 every year after that, until she is culled or dies.
A "calf".
A newborn calf, a baby calf or just a calf.