It depends on who has the stronger genes. DNA is packaged in chromosomes - the horse has 64, arranged in 32 pairs. One chromosome from each pair is inherited from the dam and one from the sire. A dominant allele (two copies of each gene or marker) coding for a trait will be expressed in the appearance or character of an animal. For example: an animal with a dominant allele for a grey coat will always be grey. An animal with the dominant grey allele must inherit it from one of its parents, and therefore, a grey animal must have at least one grey parent. The same goes for a specific breed of horse. A thoroughbred cross bred with a Halflinger might or might not actually have a mane that stands erect or the dorsal stripe most Halflingers have unless the dominant genes that will make up how the horse looks, is that of the Halflinger. I hope this helped.
a stanardbred or thoroughbred mix would make a nice fast horse.
When you cross a quarter horse and a thoroughbred, you will get an appendix quarter horse. The paint may or may not come out in the foal. That is all in the genetics, and I would need more info to tell you that.
The obvious answer to that would be a Quarter horse.
"feral thoroughbred horse" is very nearly an oxymoron. A thoroughbred must, by definition, be bred in captivity. Asking where the habitat of something that cannot exist is is rather pointless. It's possible that a thoroughbred horse could escape, but its habitat would then be "somewhere around where it used to live, probably" which is not really very informative.
There is no one size for a thoroughbred, you need to find the custom fit for your horse. To find out how to measure your horse for the saddle tree, see the related link.
The Thoroughbred is made for fast racing while the Akhal-Teke is built more for endurance. Usually a cross like this will result in a horse that isn't to good at either. If you for example bred a Quarter Horse (fast at short distances) and a Thoroghbred it wouldn't work well. They have to have something in common.
I did a little research and would suggest a warmblood-type horse if it was used specifically for dressage. For eventing, I would choose to breed a Clydesdale mare to a Thoroughbred stallion. These crosses provide excellent jumping horses with great stamina and strength.
My favorites would be Paint, Thoroughbred, Arabian, Lizzipanner, or a mustang.
Well going by breed, that would be a Thoroughbred, as for a specific horse I'm not sure.
It depends. Sprinting, it might be unless the thoroughbred is bred for racing. then the thoroughbred might win. in a long run, the thoroughbred would win
Famous Woman was a thoroughbred horse who was born in 2000. All of her ancestors were also thoroughbreds, so that would mean that any foal of hers was also a thoroughbred if she was bred to a thoroughbred.
The Kentucky Derby is a horse race, you would win it on a horse, specifically a three year old Thoroughbred.