borne
This question is impossible to answer since we have no idea of location where these calves are born, location as in country or state/province.
A bastard wing is a tuft of feathers borne by the bony thumb-like structure in a bird's wing.
Entomologists study mosquitoes, focusing on aspects such as their behavior, habitats, and biology. They work to understand mosquito-borne diseases, as well as develop strategies for their control and prevention.
Trypanosomiasis is also known as sleeping sickness. It is a vector-borne parasitic disease caused by the Trypanosoma parasite, transmitted to humans through the bite of the tsetse fly.
Yes, the noun 'bear' is a concrete noun, a word for a type of mammal; a word for a physical thing.The word 'bear' is also a verb: bear, bears, bearing, bore, borne.
borne
François Borne was born in 1840.
The homophone for the word "born" is "borne."
Guillaume Borne was born on 1988-02-12.
Edme Étienne Borne Desfourneaux was born in 1767.
Lucien-Hubert Borne was born on 1884-08-20.
Hal Borne was born on December 26, 1911, in Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Matt Borne was born on July 27, 1957, in Portland, Oregon, USA.
Yes. It is one past participle of the verb "to bear" and is also used as an adjective (e.g native-born, a born singer). The other past participle is borne (carried, held, or produced, e.g. borne aloft, borne out, borne fruit).
Borne would be the preferred usage here. While both borne and born are past participles of the verb to bear, linguists have made a distinction. Born is used when referring to a physical birth, with the focus is on the offspring. It is always used passively: "These kittens were born only yesterday." Borne is used in all other senses: "My efforts have today borne fruit." And borne is used when the emphasis is on the birth-giver and the voice is active: "This mother kitten has borne two litters before."
when were u borne
"borne" is the past participle of "bear". A heavy load was borne by the little burro. He had borne many misfortunes through the years.