"The buck stops here."
"He shot the seven point buck."
"He asked to borrow a buck."
Ewe, for,vixen
you can get it by stereching or pulling on your back
He wrote a biography about Pearl S. Buck.
The key to understanding this sentence is to realize that a buck is a male deer and a doe is a female deer. The plural for doe is the same as the word does (ie. Does the dog bark much?), which adds to the confusion. The meaning of the sentence can be explained like this: The male deer does funny things when the girl deer are present.
Nobody wanted to do the job, so we all past the buck. Joe passed the buck.
Buck is a homograph because it has two meanings but identical spelling and pronunciation.
The noun buck is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an adult male deer or rabbit; an informal word for a dollar. The word buck is also a verb: buck, bucks, bucking, bucked.
That buck will provide a lot of venison.
The word doe is never spelled does; it is spelled doe. Does can be the third person singular of the verb to do, or it can be the plural of the noun doe. The group of deer consisted of one buck and three does.
I paid the man eight bucks. "Why I say look at them there bucks headed straight at us my boy, I would move outta the way if I were you."
It has one syllable.
I have heard buck used in reference to a young male slave.
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE