No living birds have teeth as adults, some have an "egg tooth" but it's not for biting or chewing, it's to break their shell so they can hatch.
Prehistoric birds did have teeth, some were quite impressive.
Birds do not have teeth, although some species of geese have tooth-like serrations called 'tomia' which run along the outside of the top and bottom of their bills, and look very much like teeth.
· The chickens have protection from the elements and predators. · The hens can still move around easily. · The hens have more social connection with other hens. · Allows hens to have a greater behavioural repertoire.
No, hens do not live in a pen. Hens live in what is called a coop. Pigs are the animals that live in a pen.
Two hens are still alive.
Stew meat. ;) Old chickens don't actually have any special nomenclature. "Pullets" are young, immature female chickens and "hens" are mature, female chickens. However, most hens will continue laying until the year they die, just not nearly in the quantity that they did when they were 1 year old.
Hens are female (girls) and roosters are male (boys).
well, i found out that scarce means a lot less and hens have no teeth sooooo it sorta means less than nothing so it would also mean highly unlikely
yes they do but they are like hens teeth.
Snakes legs with a side of powered hens teeth, and ape tails.
This is not an idiom, so it means what it says. Something is as rare or hard to find as teeth on a female chicken (or any chicken) - chickens are birds, and do not have teeth.
An idiom is a rendition of a combination of words that have a figurative meaning. Most idioms have no clear "inventor".
The analogy compares relationships: "teeth" belong to "hen" as "nest" belongs to "mare." Just as hens have teeth in a figurative sense (as in the term "hen's teeth," which are rare), mares (female horses) have "nests" in the form of their foals or the areas where they give birth. Therefore, "mare" is the answer because it completes the relationship in the same way.
The plural form for the noun chicken is chickens; the plural possessive form is chickens'.
A group of hens is called a brood.
Eggs from battery hens, i.e. hens that are kept in cages (known as batteries) where several hens live together in one cage. These hens cannot roam freely as free-range hens can.
more hens = more eggs + more chickens (possibly more hens) = £££££
The standard collective nouns for 'hens' are:a brood of hensa clutch of hens
No hens can talk.