The common term would be "surrendering."
it depends on the chicken some do stop but after their older and some might not stop laying but they will slow down (not lay as frequent)
Only a second or two, depending on how quickly she has to get up, and whether she's laying on an incline or not.
Oviparous animals are known to lay eggs. Some egg laying species are internally fertilized while some are externally fertilized.
Chickens do not give birth. Chicken reproduce by laying eggs, which are hatched in about 21 days after they are laid. A chicken is called a laying chicken when it is grown for the purpose of laying eggs, as opposed to a frying or eating chicken, which is raised for food.
When they excrete the eggs from their body it's called "laying" - when the baby bird is ready to come out of the shell, it's called "hatching"
End of the war. Or temporary end of the war. Laying down of weapons.
it has to go!
The word is recumbent.
sedimentation
Laying My Burdens Down was created in 1970.
The North. It was the surrender that signalled the end of the war - Lee's barefoot and starving Confederates laying down their weapons for Ulysses Grant.
This song is called "Just" from Radiohead's The Bends(1995). The music video is of the man laying on the sidewalk as many people stop to ask what he is doing.
An individual laying face down is often refered to as laying "prone." This position is most common during sleep, and can also be an intentional position depending on the activity the individual is participating in.
The act of depositing or laying eggs is called Oviposition.
Sedimentation
Not usually. They can't sit on their rears like dogs or cats can because they don't have the agility or flexibility in their hind-quarters like dogs or cats do. It's rare to see a bovine, bull or cow, to sit like a cat or dog can, but it has been seen before. On the other hand, "sitting" could mean laying down with front and back feet tucked underneath, and the animal laying partly on its side, more onto one side of its hip. This is called laying down, though, not sitting.
Laying down.