Animal produced by crossing a jennet (female donkey) with an equine stallion.
sterile offspring of a male horse and a female donkey or ass
a cross between a jennet (a female donkey), and a stallion (a male horse)
a horse stallion/donkey mare (jenny or jennet) hybrid, they are less easy to produce than mules as stallion/jenny matings are less likely to result in pregnancy than jack/mare matings
a hybrid of a donkey mother and horse father and is quite different from a mule which is the product of a horse mother and donkey father
a hybrid, the product of a stallion mating with a she-ass
a much rarer cross, with a donkey for a mother and a horse or pony for a father
A cross between a donkey Jenny and a stallion.
Sterile offspring of a stallion and a jennet. Now I'll bet you are wondering why you never see hinnies even though you can't walk ten feet without tripping over a mule. Gail Damerow probably has the answer in her groundbreaking essay "Why Not Hinnies?" And if she doesn't have it, Greg Sefton and Leah Patton have collaborated on the scholarly "Ponderings on Hinnies."
A hinny is the offspring of a male horse and a female donkey (jennet or jenny). They are rarer than mules, which are the offspring of a male donkey (jackass or jack) and a female horse. Like the mule, the hinny is almost always sterile.