A young chicken is called a chick, a pullet (young hen), or a cockerel (young rooster).
No matter the sex, the name for a young chicken is a chick. then when they are mature they become either a hen or a rooster.
A young rooster is called a cockerel. Male chickens under one year old are called this. After they reach their first year they are concidered an adult rooster.
An immature female chicken is called a pullet. This term is typically used to refer to a young female chicken that has not started laying eggs yet.
A really dumb rooster :-)
Hamel, Hansel, Bobel: those are nouns. A young, less than 1 year old male chicken is called a cockerel. That's a pronoun.
A chicken.
They are usually called a cockerel.
No matter the sex, the name for a young chicken is a chick. then when they are mature they become either a hen or a rooster.
A young male chicken is a cockerel. A young female chicken is a pullet.
None, a rooster, is an adult male chicken (with the female being called a hen). Immature male chickens of less than a year's age are called cockerels.
No. A chick would be a young bird, particularly a chicken.
A baby chicken is called a chick. A female chicken that is still too young to lay eggs is called a pullet
Jessika
The very young, the very old and of course the male chicken which is called a rooster.
A young rooster is called a cockerel. Male chickens under one year old are called this. After they reach their first year they are concidered an adult rooster.
Young hens are often called pullets, but I have never heard of a bullit...
An immature female chicken is called a pullet. This term is typically used to refer to a young female chicken that has not started laying eggs yet.