No. Horses and ponies are incapable of vomiting. A band of muscle around the esophagus keeps food from coming back up from the stomach. yes
They do, but it's usually called hair, not fur. And yes, they have a lot of it, most of it in their manes and tails.
Yes
ponies
who are ponies enemies?
The answer is ponies' because it's already plural.
Yes, ponies can swim. The ponies of Sable Island swim back and forth to get food during the poor seasons.
ponies limp when they are born
Because many wild ponies live in all sorts of different climates, often times rough and cold ones.
Horses and ponies are mammals - they have fur, give birth to live young and feed the young with milk. Mammals are all vertebrates with an internal skeleton.
ponies ponies ponies ponies x5 gigi pricsilla angel mr snoodle ponies ponies ponies poniesx3 tune from begginning
The collective noun for ponies is a string of ponies. A string of ponies is traditional for a group of ponies owned or bred, usually for a particular purpose. That collective doesn't apply to all situations where there may be a group of ponies. Random groups of ponies could be found in many situations, a corral of ponies, a parade of ponies, a family of ponies; or even more fanciful, a pile of ponies, a party of ponies, or a plethora of ponies.
The possessive form of the plural noun ponies is ponies'.Example: The ponies' owner feeds them a special diet
wild ponies are called... WILD PONIES-Dah!
The collective noun for ponies is a string of ponies. A string of ponies is traditional for a group of ponies owned or bred for a particular purpose. That collective doesn't apply to all situations where there may be a group of ponies. The general collective noun is a herd of ponies.
who are ponies enemies?
ponies
They are ponies!
Sure. I ride ponies, and even small adults can ride ponies
The answer is ponies' because it's already plural.