• @[email protected]
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    English
    810 months ago

    Wait. The singular of cattle is cattle? I think that’s the part that confuses me. Or is there no singular and you must use cow/bull? Either way I’ve never really thought about it and now I can’t not

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      “Cattle” is a mass noun. You have a lot of cattle.

      If you want to state a number of them, you have seventy-two head of cattle. “Head” is a counter; compare “sheets of paper”, “bales of hay”, or “hands of poker”.

      You wouldn’t say you have fifty hay, or that you played five pokers. And “papers” (count noun) are written works, whereas “paper” (mass noun) or “sheets of paper” (mass noun with counter) is what the works are written on.

      If you’re in the cattle business, you absolutely do care about their age, sex, and reproductive status. So you might have one calf and six cows; or three steers; or two heifers, a yearling calf, and a bull.

      If you really need to refer to one bovine without talking about its age, sex, or reproductive status … you have one head of cattle, or you have a cattlebeast.

      Yep, that’s a thing.

    • Rhynoplaz
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      710 months ago

      Actually, your already familiar with this: Moose.

      One Moose. Two Moose. Male is a bull. Female is a cow. 🤯

    • @[email protected]
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      310 months ago

      No, the person you’re replying to is just wrong. The common name for that animal is cow, and in common usage it can refer to both sexes. Cattle is the plural.