The yolk the yellow. Grade A eggs are not supposed to be fertilized but what do you think that white stuff across the yolk is its rooster **** so even though they sell um as grade A unfertilized many are Grand Mother had a chicken farm. Thumbs down for a correct answer got some real chit heads here are should I say cut throat.
2007-01-21 08:04:49
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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There's a little white dot on the yolk called the germ spot. If the egg is fertile and incubated it will develop from there. The "white" part of the egg is there for moisture and cushioning as the embryo develops. The yolk becomes the chick's food which it uses to grow until it hatches.
2007-01-21 08:38:27
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answer #2
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answered by Shaun 4
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The part of the egg that is the bird is only the tiniest little speck that you can hardly see. The "egg" part of the egg (yoke and white) is food for the speck, that grows into a baby bird.
As the bird gets bigger the egg part gets smaller because it is absorbed by the growing bird which turns it into organs, skin, blood, muscle, brains and such. We do the same thing with an egg when we eat it.
2007-01-21 08:16:15
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answer #3
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answered by light_jk 2
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Yolk
2007-01-21 08:05:11
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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neither. Commercially sold chicken eggs are unfertilised so there is no bird in there at all. The yolk would be the closest thing as this would be the food supply for the embryo as it develops.
2007-01-21 08:05:04
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answer #5
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answered by Alasdair S 2
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Neither. If you crack an egg open, just by the yolk is a little lumpy bit. That is the embryo.
2007-01-21 08:04:22
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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the yolk is the bird bust the white is what the bird eats before it is ready to hatch
2007-01-21 08:05:39
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answer #7
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answered by Sami 2
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the baby chick forms in the yolk
2007-01-21 08:12:11
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Is this some kind of yolk?
2007-01-21 08:05:24
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answer #9
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answered by $Sun King$ 7
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the white, the hatchling swallows the yolk just before it hatches.
2007-01-21 08:10:44
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answer #10
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answered by p h 6
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