There are dozens, perhaps hundreds or even thousands. Cattle, pigs, sheep, goats, horses, dogs and cats may be the most obvious to us here on American farms, but carabao (the Asian water buffalo), alpaca, buffalo, bison, llamas, camels, deer, elk and donkeys come to mind after just a couple of minutes of thought.
Four feet and four hooves (one hoof [cloven] per foot), four teats, four quarters to one udder, and four digestive compartments in one stomach.
Sixteen (16).
2
To find the answer that there are five more crows than cows in the farmer's field you need to know how many animal legs are in the field. The complete problem is, "there is a total of 52 legs of all of the animals. How many cows and how many crows are in the field?"
42.
A cow has 4 legs; therefore, 4 legs times 8 cows equals 32. A chicken has 2 legs; therefore, 2 legs times 10 chickens equals 20. So, 8 cows have more legs than 10 chickens.
Pembrokes have no tails or really short tails, stubby legs, are longer than Cardigans, have a wider face, and are generally more outgoing. The Pembroke is usually the dog one pictures when they think of a Corgi. Cardigans have long and fluffy tails, longer legs than the Pembroke, are a bit bigger, more 'regal' looking, have a more narrow or wedge-shaped face, and are generally more reserved.
Now, they are typically from cows, but they use to come from Ox, which are nothing more then castrated bulls. Ox-Tail is nothing more then the tail of a beef animal.
It is not an insect. It has more than 6 legs.
If its Tails as in Miles Prower-- Tails was born naturally with two tails, so the answer is no. Tails will only and always have two tails no more or less, he won't and cannot grow another one.
I think more than 4 legs.
There are many kinds of cowsheds for all different kinds of cows. There are sheds for milking cows, for calves to drink milk, for pregnant cows, for quarantined cows, for multiple breeds to live together, for abandoned cows, for male cows, and much more.
As often as possible and as often as there are cows that are needing his services. That said, a bull can breed as many as 2 to 10 cows (or more) per day, depending on how many cows are in heat on that day.
tails
Well it certainly ain't a cow, that's for sure. Cows don't have arms, they have legs, and consequently with no legs or head (or tail) they'd be nothing more than a big heavy block of "beef."