POULTRY vs FOWL: NOUN
- Domestic fowl (chickens, ducks, turkeys and geese) raised for food (either meat or eggs)
- Domestic fowls reared for the table, or for their eggs or feathers, such as cocks and hens, capons, turkeys, ducks, and geese.
- A number of specimens of the common hen, as distinguished from ducks, geese, etc.; particularly, chickens dressed for market.
- Domestic fowls collectively; those birds which are ordinarily kept in a state of domestication for their flesh, eggs, or feathers, as the domestic hen, turkeys, guinea-fowl, geese, and ducks.
- Domesticated fowl, such as chickens, turkeys, ducks, or geese, raised for meat or eggs.
- Flesh of chickens or turkeys or ducks or geese raised for food
- The meat from a domestic fowl
- A domesticated gallinaceous bird though to be descended from the red jungle fowl
- A bird, such as a duck, goose, turkey, or pheasant, that is used as food or hunted as game.
- Any of various birds of the order Galliformes, especially the common, widely domesticated chicken (Gallus domesticus).
- The flesh of a bird or fowl (wild or domestic) used as food
- A domesticated gallinaceous bird though to be descended from the red jungle fowl
- The flesh of such birds used as food.
- A bird of any kind.
- A bird: generally unchanged in the plural when used in a collective or generic sense.
- Specifically A barn-yard cock or hen; also, a domestic duck or turkey; in the plural, poultry.
- See the qualifying words.
- Any bird; esp., any large edible bird.
- Any domesticated bird used as food, as a hen, turkey, duck; in a more restricted sense, the common domestic cock or hen (Gallus domesticus).
- A fowl that frequents the barnyard; the common domestic cock or hen.
- A bird.
- A bird of the order Galliformes, including chickens, turkeys, pheasant, partridges and quail.
- Birds which are hunted or kept for food, including Galliformes and also waterfowl of the order Anseriformes such as ducks, geese and swans.
POULTRY vs FOWL: VERB
- N/A
- Hunt fowl
- Hunt fowl in the forest
- To hunt fowl.
POULTRY vs FOWL: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To hunt, trap, or shoot wildfowl.
- A light gun with smooth bore, adapted for the use of small shot in killing birds or small quadrupeds.
- To catch or kill wild fowl, for game or food, as by shooting, or by decoys, nets, etc.
POULTRY vs FOWL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- An obsolete variant of foul.
- To catch or kill wild fowl as game or for food, as by means of decoys, nets, or snares, by pursuing them with falcons or hawks, or by shooting.
- To hunt wild fowl over or in; catch or kill wild fowl in.
POULTRY vs FOWL: RELATED WORDS
- Husbandry, Hen, Rooster, Bird, Slaughtering, Flocks, Birds, Broiler, Fowls, Meat, Livestock, Chicken, Chickens, Domestic fowl, Fowl
- Game, Hame, Poodle, Flesh, Typhoid, Domesticus, Meat, Hen, Fish, Avian, Chicken, Waterfowl, Domestic fowl, Bird, Poultry
POULTRY vs FOWL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Quill, Bianca, Ave, Flock, Avian, Husbandry, Hen, Rooster, Bird, Broiler, Meat, Livestock, Chicken, Domestic fowl, Fowl
- Game, Hame, Poodle, Flesh, Typhoid, Domesticus, Meat, Hen, Fish, Avian, Chicken, Waterfowl, Domestic fowl, Bird, Poultry
POULTRY vs FOWL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Poultry feed is food for farm poultry, including chickens, ducks, quail, and.
- The poultry and poultry products cannot be marketed out of state.
- Can I purchase live poultry to process under the Poultry Bill?
- Fly control in poultry barns: poultry fact sheet.
- Common poultry diseases, boys and girls poultry club work.
- Ground Meat and Poultry Ground meat and poultry receive more handling than any other cut of meat or poultry.
- There could be two types of poultry waste, namely: Poultry litter: a product from poultry farms where birds are raised on floors.
- Under some poultry exemptions, poultry and poultry products can be sold directly to hotels, restaurants, or institutions.
- Poultry Business Directory provides top companies that offer poultry Integration and contract poultry growing is common, not.
- Antibiotic resistance of faecal enterococci in poultry, poultry farmers, and poultry slaughterers.
- See more ideas about sparring, game fowl, muff.
- Or fowl, which is not chic but chip.
- Blackhead will affect chickens, pea fowl and turkeys but turkeys and pea fowl are more vulnerable to infection than chickens.
- When Europeans first encountered the wild turkey in Mexico, they incorrectly classified the bird as a type of guinea fowl called a turkey fowl.
- Fowl was easy enough, Fowl by name, foul by nature.
- Artemis Fowl used this tactic to escape the time-field that the LEP put over Fowl Manor.
- Newcastle disease, infectious bronchitis, infectious laryngotracheitis, fowl pox, and fowl cholera vaccinations per facility standard operating procedures.
- Is gathering fowl seed sea fowl heaven divide moveth creepeth.
- Large free range fowl yard with enclosed fowl house.
- FOWL CHOLERA Fowl cholera is a contagious septicaemic disease of almost all classes of fowl.
POULTRY vs FOWL: QUESTIONS
- Why is egg fertility important in poultry production?
- What are the brooding requirements for poultry chicks?
- Is poultry breeding and rearing profitable in Europe?
- How many chickens are slaughtered at fresh poultry?
- Will American consumers eat processed poultry from China?
- How does the poultry Bazaar help in poultry development in Kerala?
- Which of the following poultry equipments is used for keeping poultry?
- What is the Uttar Pradesh poultry loan scheme for poultry farmers?
- Why every backyard poultry farmer needs electric poultry netting?
- How does poultry Bazaar help Tamil Nadu poultry farmers?
- How many books are there in th Artemis Fowl series?
- Can I substitute guinea fowl for chicken in a recipe?
- Is raw Azolla a sustainable feed additive for Nicobari fowl?
- Are old English game Bantams the same as large fowl?
- How many mg of aureomycin per pound for fowl cholera?
- What is the Artemis Fowl-Percy Jackson (world) crossover?
- How many Artemis Fowl books has Eoin Quinn written?
- What techniques did ancient Egyptians use to catch fowl?
- Are hybrid grey jungle fowl more successful at mating?
- Is Pasteurella multocida the agent of fowl cholera?