the sound of a hen is usually clucking.
Cluck is the usual descriptive for a hens vocalizations.
Yes. The hens will make a fast chattering sound when upset, bothered. Sounds like a quickly repeated "tuck tuck tuck tuck tuck". I find this happens most when there is a small rodent like a mouse in the coop, it is different from the sound they make when threatened by something.
If you are taking about the hen sitting on eggs then it will make things easy for you and the hen. you will have a better outcome if you move the hen or take the rooster out.
Roosters make this noise to calm and reassure the hen all is right with the flock. Roosters have many ways to communicate with the hens such as crowing, which is a call to other roosters to let them know he is guarding the flock or to let the hens who have wandered away from the flock to come back.
A cackleberry is a slang term for an egg, from the resemblance of an egg to a fruit, and the sound of the hen which laid it.
Cluck is the usual descriptive for a hens vocalizations.
cluck,
Male and female pigeons make very similar sounds, even during courtship. The only sex-specific sound is that of the male, a soft rolling hoo that is made while he circles the female to impress her.
The word "hen" contains a short vowel sound. The 'e' in "hen" is pronounced as a short e sound.
Hens cluck.
Yes. The E is a short E sound as in hem and men.
bacock
cockadoodledoo or cluck
Yes. The hens will make a fast chattering sound when upset, bothered. Sounds like a quickly repeated "tuck tuck tuck tuck tuck". I find this happens most when there is a small rodent like a mouse in the coop, it is different from the sound they make when threatened by something.
The word "hen" has a short e sound.
Yes.
Yes, the word hen does have the short e sound. Some other words with the same short e sound are let, peck, and ten.