It depends where the ducks are:
In flight: flock
On the ground: brace, badling, or sord
On the water: raft, team, or paddling
Chicks: brood or clutch
A group of ducks can be called a badelynge (if they are on the ground), bunch, brace, flock, paddling, raft, skein, string, or team.
If it's a group of ducklings (i.e., they've recently hatched and are being looked after by their mother), it is called a brood.
A female duck is called a duck, or, as a female bird, a hen.
A coot ( a type of duck) when in a group is referred to as a: cover of coots.
A single baby duck is called a duckling, now make that plural. A group of ducks, however, is called a balding.
Yes. A duck is a bird, and birds belong, with mammals, reptiles, amphibians and fish, to the group called 'vertebrates' and hence has a backbone.
A female duck is called a duck or a hen as a male is called a drake
A female duck is called a duck, or, as a female bird, a hen.
A coot ( a type of duck) when in a group is referred to as a: cover of coots.
Widgeons, a Eurasian duck. A group of them are referred to as a "company".
A single baby duck is called a duckling, now make that plural. A group of ducks, however, is called a balding.
Yes. A duck is a bird, and birds belong, with mammals, reptiles, amphibians and fish, to the group called 'vertebrates' and hence has a backbone.
When a duck is a baby, it is called a duckling.
A female duck is called a duck or a hen as a male is called a drake
An immature female duck is called a duckling. Once the female duck matures it is called a hen or duck.
There is no name for a castrated male duck. An intact male duck is called a drake while a female duck is called a duck.
I am pretty sure that a mother duck is just called a mother duck.
Yes, there is an animal called a duck.
a male duck of course ! opposite of a female