When a chicken lays an egg, does it come out soft so the chicken can squeeze it out or is it hard like when you buy them at the store?
It's shells are soft enough for the chick to squeeze it out but as it gets exposure from light and air those shells harden and thicken to protect the egg inside and to allow it to further develop.
And how the heck does a chicken produce an egg?
Same answer as with the humans.It's programmed in our bio-systems to create eggs to reproduce its kind.A process essential to the cycle of life.
2006-08-21 10:20:28
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answer #1
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answered by cascadingrainbows 4
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Dude reportin mean answers is gay. U dont win anything and u kill the funyn part of it. Dont be a granny, and to answer your question the eggs are hard, but some reptiles lay soft eggs so the babyes cna come put cuz they dont have beaks to brake the shell.
Like the guy said,sirf the net theyll explain to u how they do it, u should know u live in a small farm town
2006-08-21 17:19:54
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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no, they do NOT come out hard, no one jere has ever seen a chicken lay an egg. the egg comes out soft and wet. within 30 seconds it dries out and is hard
2006-08-21 19:56:56
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answer #3
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answered by iberius 4
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It comes out hard.
The chicken produces eggs the same way you do.
2006-08-21 17:16:56
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answer #4
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answered by James A 4
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They come out hard, can't remember the answers to the rest
2006-08-21 17:16:48
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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it come out hard just as if a human was having they baby but a little different
2006-08-21 17:19:36
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answer #6
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answered by tammy c 1
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its hard like when you buy them.... and my guess would be the form eggs much like we form babys, just with a hard shell lining the uterus......
2006-08-21 17:17:10
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answer #7
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answered by tanny_fanny2003 4
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same way a snake or turtle does. but i believe they come out hard (i MAY be wrong).
2006-08-21 17:27:30
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answer #8
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answered by Dope boy magic 2
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1.hard
2.through a complicated chemical process that's detailed on about a dozen sites, if you only search.....
2006-08-21 17:16:16
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answer #9
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answered by Just_A_Boy 4
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http://www.epa.gov/agriculture/ag101/poultry.html
2006-08-21 17:16:41
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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