The breeding male of a cow is called a bull.
They're both of the same species, just opposite sexes. They have the same of everything, except the bull has male reproductive organs and the cow has female reproductive organs, and the bull has more muscle mass on him than a cow does.
There is no such thing as a "female cow" nor a "male cow." "Cow" refers to the female of any species including the domestic bovine, and is not a name of a specific animal. The male of a domestic bovine is called a bull, and the female (mature) a cow. To answer your question, it is the bull that is the larger of the two in most cases, such as within breeds and when the bull and the cow are the same age. But, if you compare between breeds, such as if the bull is a Dexter and the cow a Holstein, or if the bull is much younger than the cow, then the opposite may be true.
A male wildebeest is called a bull.
In a way, but remember male cows don't exist, unless they are male and look like a cow, which is often if you find a "bull" that looks like a cow but has testicles where there should be an udder. Ultimately, bulls are bulls, and are the much more masculine counterpart of the female bovine (the cow).
The breeding male of a cow is called a bull.
A bull is the male form of a cow.
There is no such thing as a male cow. A cow is a mature female bovine that had had a calf, and a bull is an intact male bovine. So the young offspring of a bull and cow is a calf.
There really is no such thing as a male cow. Cow is female and Bull is male.
Bulls are male cowsWhen a bull and a cow (all cows are female)'mate' if the cow has a 'male' cow its called a 'bull'
A male is called a 'bull' and a female a 'cow'
They're both of the same species, just opposite sexes. They have the same of everything, except the bull has male reproductive organs and the cow has female reproductive organs, and the bull has more muscle mass on him than a cow does.
There is no such thing as a "female cow" nor a "male cow." "Cow" refers to the female of any species including the domestic bovine, and is not a name of a specific animal. The male of a domestic bovine is called a bull, and the female (mature) a cow. To answer your question, it is the bull that is the larger of the two in most cases, such as within breeds and when the bull and the cow are the same age. But, if you compare between breeds, such as if the bull is a Dexter and the cow a Holstein, or if the bull is much younger than the cow, then the opposite may be true.
A male cow is called a bull.
A male wildebeest is called a bull.
In a way, but remember male cows don't exist, unless they are male and look like a cow, which is often if you find a "bull" that looks like a cow but has testicles where there should be an udder. Ultimately, bulls are bulls, and are the much more masculine counterpart of the female bovine (the cow).
Any name like Sirloin, T-Bone, Chester, Angus, Blackie, etc.