0 food that has been eaten by an animal with more than one stomach, such as a cow, and that comes back into the animal's mouth to be chewed again before going into the second stomach:
As horses do not chew the cud, many seeds pass more or less intact though the digestive tract.
All that remained were the unions' usual tactics and their anger, later expressed by showers of cuds and snipes.
I want to chew the cud a little because there is a fair amount of cud to chew.
The ruminants—cattle, sheep—chew the cud and must lie down and digest their food, and then they are happy.
The facts are obvious: if for the sake of sheer greed we want to turn a cud-chewing animal into a feeder on carrion, then we have got it all wrong.
We would sit and chew the cud.
A cud is a variation of a die defect in which the coin bears a raised portion of metal.
He can chew the cud (has wisdom) but does not have cleft hooves (have both spiritual and temporal authorities).