A steer is a bull that has been neutered so he cannot produce offspring. In horses, the equivalent is the gelding.
If intact, a bull. If castrated, a steer or bullock.
Because chances are that 1 head is not a cow but another type of bovine, like a steer, heifer or bull. Cows are mature female bovines that have had a calf.
In cattle, a father is a called a sire. Also, it would not be a father cow, because "cow" means female. A male is a bull or a steer.
A first-calf Holstein heifer should ideally weight at least 1000 pounds at the time of calving. A mature, large-framed Holstein cow in her fourth or later lactation may weigh up to 1800 pounds.
A young "male cow" (which is non-existent, by the way) is called a bullock or a young bull or, if not of weaning age, a bull calf. That is, if the so-called "male cow" is intact. If not, it is called a steer calf if castrated and is still relying on its mother's milk, or simply a steer after weaning or after it reaches around a year of age.
Yes, but you're better off getting a better quality porterhouse steak from a steer than you would a cow. A steer is younger than a cow and the meat is more tender and less gamey-tasting than a cow would be.
To 'Steer' A car wheel, or to Feed a Baby 'steer.' A steer can also be a baby cow.
The homograph of steer is steer (either meaning to steer a car or the animal steer).
The cow wants a divorce because she had a "bum steer."
The cow wants a divorce because she had a "bum steer."
clear steer
A steer is a male or bull that has been neutered like a dog, called castrated. They will not be able to reproduce. Only males or bulls are steers. Steers are usually used for beef purposes.
A steer or bull cow is a male cow. The female cow is usually called a heifer. A dairy cow is sometimes called a milker.
A beef cow or a beef steer (castrated male bovine).
A cow. Male = bull Female = cow Castrated male = steer
There is no such thing as a "neutered cow." You can get a neutered bull, which is called a steer, or a spayed heifer, but never a "neutered cow."
If intact, a bull. If castrated, a steer or bullock.