dunghill$23297$ - définition. Qu'est-ce que dunghill$23297$
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est dunghill$23297$ - définition

DOMESTICATED BIRD KEPT BY HUMANS PRIMARILY AS A FOOD SOURCE
Rooster; Muff (chicken); Cockerel; Chickens; Cockadoodledoo; Pullet; Chicken (Domestic); Cock (chicken); Chicket; Gallus gallus domesticus; Domestic fowl; Common domestic fowl; Cockeral; Chooks; Cock (bird); Muff/beard; Pullets; G. gallus domesticus; Cockerels; Domestic chicken; Male chicken; Gallus domesticus; Hen (bird); Bock bock; Chiken; Chickens as pets; Cocka doodle doo; Cocka-doodle-doo; G. domesticus; Pet chicken; Domestic Chicken; Chickon; Chicken (bird); 🐓; 🐔; Cockrel; Crowing; Domesticated chicken; Domestic cock; Crow (cock); Crow (rooster); Chicken Anatomy and Physiology; Dunghill fowl; Roosters; Common fowl; Cockcrow; Chicken breeding; Hen (chicken); Chicken terminology; Cockadoodledo
  • Skull of a three-week-old chicken. Here the opisthotic bone appears in the occipital region, as in the adult Chelonian. bo = Basi-occipital, bt = Basi-temporal, eo = Opisthotic, f = Frontal, fm = Foramen magnum, fo = Fontanella, oc = Occipital condyle, op = Opisthotic, p = Parietal, pf = Post-frontal, sc = Sinus canal in supra-occipital, so = Supra-occipital, sq = Squamosal, 8 = Exit of vagus nerve.
  • Woman with rooster
  • Backyard heritage chickens eating kitchen food scraps.
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  • Hen with chicks
  • Chicken eggs vary in colour depending on the breed, and sometimes, the hen, typically ranging from bright white to shades of brown and even blue, green, light pinkish and purple.
  • left
  • Eggs from different breeds
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  • 257x257px
  • Hen with chicks
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  • Chicks in a coop
  • Mottle gene
  • Two [[red junglefowl]], a cock and a hen
  • 421x421px

chicken         
1) Term of endearnment for co-worker, often used in its plural form in relation to team.
Chickens, time for the meeting....
2) Used to describe someone who runs around doing things, but doesn't understand why (running around like a chicken with its head cut off).
Emphasis in a sentence dictates the intensity (like fuggetabout it).
He's such a chicken!
chicken         
(chickens, chickening, chickened)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
Chickens are birds which are kept on a farm for their eggs and for their meat.
Lionel built a coop so that they could raise chickens and have a supply of fresh eggs.
...free-range chickens.
= hen
N-COUNT
Chicken is the flesh of this bird eaten as food.
...roast chicken with wild mushrooms.
...chicken soup.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
If someone calls you a chicken, they mean that you are afraid to do something. (INFORMAL)
I'm scared of the dark. I'm a big chicken.
= coward
N-COUNT [disapproval]
Chicken is also an adjective.
Why are you so chicken, Gregory?
ADJ: v-link ADJ
3.
If you say that someone is counting their chickens, you mean that they are assuming that they will be successful or get something, when this is not certain.
I don't want to count my chickens before they are hatched.
PHRASE: V inflects
4.
If you describe a situation as a chicken and egg situation, you mean that it is impossible to decide which of two things caused the other one.
It's a chicken and egg situation. Does the deficiency lead to the eczema or has the eczema led to certain deficiencies?
PHRASE: PHR n
5.
chickens come home to roost: see roost
rooster         
(roosters)
A rooster is an adult male chicken. (AM; in BRIT, use cock
)
N-COUNT

Wikipédia

Chicken

The chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) is a domesticated junglefowl species, with attributes of wild species such as the grey and the Ceylon junglefowl that are originally from Southeast Asia. Rooster and cock are terms for adult male birds, and a younger male may be called a cockerel. A male that has been castrated is a capon. An adult female bird is called a hen, and a sexually immature female is called a pullet. Humans keep chickens primarily as a source of food (consuming both their meat and eggs) or as pets. Traditionally they were also bred for cockfighting, which is still practiced in some places. Chickens domesticated for meat are broilers and for eggs are layers.

Chickens are one of the most common and widespread domestic animals, with a total population of 23.7 billion as of 2018, up from more than 19 billion in 2011. There are more chickens in the world than any other bird. There are numerous cultural references to chickens—in myth, folklore and religion, and in language and literature.

Genetic studies have pointed to multiple maternal origin theories of within South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia, but the clade found in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East and Africa originated from the Indian subcontinent. From ancient India, the chicken spread to the Eastern Mediterranean. They appear in ancient Egypt in the mid-15th century BC, with the "bird that gives birth every day" having come from the land between Syria and Shinar, Babylonia, according to the annals of Thutmose III. They are known in ancient Greece from the 5th century BC.