Cows produce milk in their udders, which are scientifically known as the mammary glands - similar to a human female's breast.
a milking parlor
For Sanitation purposes prior to milking the cow.
No. Desi cows (those cows in India that are used for meat and milking) come in a wide variety of breeds and colours. They can range from Jersey and Holsteins to Nelore or Nguni cattle.
Yes especially if they are injured, or dehorned or castrated. Note it is only the bulls that get castrated, not cows. Thus it is much easier to say that cattle do bleed if wounds that break their skin are inflicted on them.
Cows don't give nectar, they give milk. Cows are mammals, not plants or flowers. However, there is a particular insect that farms another insect for its nectar, and these would be ants farming aphids and milking them like humans milk cows. Once the aphids are done producing, the ants eat them, also just like what humans do with cows when they cannot produce milk anymore.
"It's milking time" or "they're milking cows."
yea
Yes, a significant number of dairy cows are slaughtered for human consumption after their milking days are over.
a milking parlour
No. Besides, there is no such thing as a "male cow."
No, not milking cows will not make them sick. Their udders will just be sore for a few days, then eventually they'll slow down in production and dry up.
Cows that are milked are referred to as dairy cows. These cows are milked in a barn or a milk house.
Milking the cows and cleaning the dairy parlour. Bringing the cows in from grazing for calving, milking, vet assessments/treatments. Mucking out.
Teletubbies - 1997 Milking Cows 1-136 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Vaccimulgence is the the milking of cows. see vaccimulgence.com
After having their first calf.
The Milker.