Yes.
Cows have hair, not fur. Their hair is denser and longer than fur, providing protection from the elements.
No, cows do not have feathers. Cows are mammals and are covered in hair or fur, not feathers. Feathers are typically found on birds.
They are not much alike- no more alike that people and cows, I would say.
They're covered in it. In some cows it's shaggy, and in others it's smooth. In most cases it's not very soft. (Newborn calves have soft hair.)
Cows actually have hair, not fur. The hair itself is not exactly soft and silky, but it's not exactly rough either, though it is rougher than what you'd feel with the fur of a cat or a German Shepherd or Husky/Malamute. One thing is for sure: a calf's hair coat is much softer and silkier to the touch than an adult cow's.
Cows have hair, not fur. Their hair is denser and longer than fur, providing protection from the elements.
If you are asking about cows, yes they have fur.
Cows!
milk
No, cows do not have feathers. Cows are mammals and are covered in hair or fur, not feathers. Feathers are typically found on birds.
Actually, leather is made out of cow fur, as well as other mammal fur. The fur is processed to turn into leather.
fur is a natural animal as long as it says its real. when its expensive its usually real. ,leather is a a type of fur but its cows skin
Um, I don't think cows have "fur". Unless if its the distinctive pattern of the cow's fur or the hide of the cow, which can be dried into leather.
Yes, cows can get rabies. Rabies can be transmitted to cows through the bite of an infected animal, such as a wild carnivore. It is important for farmers to vaccinate their livestock against rabies to prevent its spread.
Yes, but it's called hair in most languages, just like human fur is.
Both, technically - hair is the accepted notation for the protein strand created by a follicle and unique to mammals. Fur is a dense covering of hair such that practically all skin is covered.
Yes. As mammals, cows do have hair/fur and produce milk for their young. The milk forms in the cow's udder and is available to the calf/calves at any of the four teats.