Cows don't lay eggs, chickens do. However a cow's "eggs" or ovum "matures" in the cow's fallopian tube near the uterus which sits in wait for the sperm from the bull to fertilize or fuse with it.
No. Cows are female mature bovines. Bulls are male. Thus there is no such thing as a "boy cow" or "male cow."
Ovaries release mature eggs
All cows (mature female bovines) produce milk.
The name for female meiosis is oogenesis. It is the process by which female germ cells differentiate into mature eggs.
Cows are grown up; they are mature female bovines. They eat grass, hay, silage, and other forages, basically.
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.
The feminine form of a bull is a cow. Bulls are mature intact males used for breeding cows and heifers, and cows are mature female bovines that have had at least two calves.
Cows do not lay eggs,Cows do not lay eggs,
No. Cattle include cows, which are mature female bovines. "Cattle" is a plural term encapsulating all types of bovine animals, from cows and heifers to calves and bulls to steers.
The female counterpart of a bull is a cow. Cows are mature female cattle that are typically raised for their milk, meat, or breeding purposes.
The bulls are noticeably larger than the cows, and when mature, the horns of the bulls are also larger than the horns of the cows.
Female dogs do not have mature eggs waiting for fertilization like some other animals. Instead, the eggs are released during the female's heat cycle, which can happen in response to mating. Once released, the eggs can be fertilized by sperm from the male dog.