None. I cow doesn't have fingers, silly. -_- ;-p
None. Cows have udders, not "utters." And each cow only has one udder.
Im pretty sure its called a hoof/ hooves. Unless there's a more scientific word for it
Cow's feet are red meat, but there is not a lot of tender meet to be found on the foot of a cow. They are often used to make beef broth and the meat becomes more tender when slowly simmered.
A cow has one stomach with four compartments: the rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum. Each compartment plays a unique role in the cow's digestive process.
8 hours
Cows feet are different from horses feet because a horses foot is solid across and a cows foot has toes or has a split in the middle.
There are many uses of the cow foot. These uses range from practical tools to the display of hoof artwork.
The "arm" would be the foreleg, which begins at the elbow (equivalent to the human elbow), and ends at the dewclaws.The "shoulder" in a cow is also known as the shoulder. The point of shoulder is just above the brisket and where the neck begins. The withers is the top part of the shoulder, between the back and the crest of the neck.The "foot" of a cow is known as the hoof. However, the hoof is actually equivalent to the toe in a human, not the actual foot. In regards to the structural anatomy of a cow in comparison to the foot of a human (from the ankles down to the heel and straight to the toes), things get really complicated. The hock of a cow is actually equivalent to the human heel. The cannon bone in a cow (from the knee to the pasterns or hocks to pasterns in the foreleg and hindleg, respectively) is equivalent to the metatarsuls bones that are found in our foot, which are bones that start from the heel and end at the balls of our feet. The fetlock joint is equivalent to the ball of the foot on a human. The pastern and coffin bones are equivalent to the bones that starts at the ball of the foot and ends right before the end of our toes. Finally, the toe portion of our foot (including the nail) is equivalent to the hoof on a cow.
None. Cows have udders, not "utters." And each cow only has one udder.
Depends on what the cow's eating and how much it's fed.
The possessive form of the singular noun cow is cow's.Example: The cow's foot was stuck in the mud.
the hoof.
Im pretty sure its called a hoof/ hooves. Unless there's a more scientific word for it
About as big as your brain. (Seriously.)
Cow's feet are red meat, but there is not a lot of tender meet to be found on the foot of a cow. They are often used to make beef broth and the meat becomes more tender when slowly simmered.
A cow has one stomach with four compartments: the rumen, reticulum, omasum, and abomasum. Each compartment plays a unique role in the cow's digestive process.
Yes, they are around 1 foot in diameter.