There is no such thing as a 'female colt'. A colt is a intact male horse under the age of four years old. A female foal under the age of four years old is called a filly.
Colt is wrongly used by many people to describe a foal, but the correct terms are filly foal and colt foal.
The female of a colt is called a filly.
The female of a colt is typically called a filly when referring to a young horse, and a mare once she reaches maturity.
A young horse can be called a foal if the gender is not known, a filly if it is female and a colt if it is a male.
The male of the species would be a colt.
A "colt" is a young, male horse. A "stud" is a farm where stallions live, and typically reproduce. "Stud colt" is a phrase often improperly used to describe young male horses. The proper term would be to simply call the horse a "colt." Similar to this incorrect phrase is "filly colt," which is essentially a "girl boy." A filly is a young female horse. There is no need to attach the word colt to the description, because a colt is a male. So, use the term "colt" for a young male horse, and "filly" for a young female horse.
The female of a colt is called a filly.
Colt is male,filly is female
a colt is 'un poulain' in French. The word is masculine, even for a female colt. Edit: 'Pouliche' is for a female colt.
not always a colt is a baby horse it can be male or female
Filly.
not always a colt is a baby horse it can be male or female
a filly is a female baby, and a colt is a male baby!
A young male is a colt, do you mean a filly (the female of a youngter?)
The female of a colt is typically called a filly when referring to a young horse, and a mare once she reaches maturity.
A Filly.
A young male horse is called a "colt". (older is a "stallion") A young female horse is called a "filly". (older is a "mare")
A baby horse is a foal. A male baby horse is a colt (although colt is often used for both sexes it is not correct in the strictest sense). A female baby horse is a filly