A male thoroughbred is classified as a horse by the jockey club at 4+ years of age. Horse is just another term for a stallion by their classification system.
A female frog has a bigger body.
yes male horses are sometimes bigger than a female horse. But it also depends on the breed and bloodlines of the horse.
A mare is a female horse, so a mare could not really said to be faster than a horse. It really depends on the breed and bloodlines. A fit, thoroughbred mare will be faster than a lazy trail horse. A well bred thoroughbred mare will usually beat a male from unknown, inferior bloodlines.
Any horse under one year old is called a foal. However, foals are commonly referred to as colts or fillies from the time of birth, (foaling).After the age of twelve months the horse is called a yearling.Between one and four years old a male horse is called a colt, while a female is called a filly.After four, the male (if ungelded) is called a stallion; if castrated he's called a gelding.The female after four is called a mare.
That is a mule.
mare Mare=Female Stallion=breedable male horse (stud) gelding= male horse that is fixed
They can be yes. But normally they are either a faster and smaller female or a gelding( a fixed male horse) They don't usually use stallions in races for the cause of pregnancy of other female horses, and they aren't as fast as a female Thoroughbred.
The bigger of the two is the male
When discussing parentage of a horse, the dam is female and the stud or sire is male.
No a female cobra is bigger
a female is bigger