That all depends on what you are referring to as "a cold." Bovine Respiratory Disease (BRD) is probably what you're referring to when asking about a cow "getting a cold." The best thing you could probably do is go to the vet to get some medicine to give to her via needle and syringe. Anything but Micotil is best for her, but you have to be more cautious of what you should give her if she's a dairy cow that is producing milk for you.
When you have cold or cough, people say we have a runny nose which means that the stored cough comes out our body through our nose
a cold.
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pop
about a few days, i think...
Sneezing, runny nose, watery eyes, and puffy face.symptoms of allergies? 1. Runny Nose, Stuffy Nose, Sneezing 2. Runny Nose, Stuffy Nose, Sneezing 3. Cough 4. Rashes 5. Fatigue 6. Headache 7. Nausea and Vomiting 8. Fever
Not really. Unless you have a sore throat and runny nose along with the cough, then you don't have a cold.
It is always best to treat the symptoms and get some rest. Give your body time to fight this off. For the cough, hard candy or cough drops. Try an antihistamine for the runny nose. The sore throat will feel better as the mucus running down the throat from the nose slows. The headache will better with a NSAID.
cough fever runny nose sore throat watery eyes
While both running nose and runny nose are correct, the preferred term is runny nose. A running nose is a specific instance of the event.
Though these symptoms can result in whooping cough they could also just be a common cold. The symptoms are runny nose, nasal congestion, sneezing, watery eyes, a mild fever, and a dry cough.
A runny nose can be a sign of many things, some a sickness, some not a sickness. Sicknesses could include flu, nasal/sinus infection or a cold. Non-sicknesses could include allergic reaction, hayfever and not blowing your nose enough.