In the English language there are no masculine nor feminine forms. There are only gender-specific nouns for male or female animals. Heifer is a female noun for cattle (or bovines), specifically cattle or a bovine that is young and never gave birth to a calf.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The noun for a female is sow; the noun for a male is a boar.The gender specific nouns, boar and sow, are used for:badgersbearsboarsguinea pigshedgehogshogspandaspigsprairie dogsraccoons
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun heifer is a word for a female, a cow over one year of age that has not yet produced a calf.
Feminine
Cow, first-calf heifer, bred heifer, heifer, heifer calf or spayed heifer. See the related question below.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. Since a bullock can refer to both a steer and a young bull, the female counterpart of a young bull would be a heifer. But for a steer, that would be a spayed heifer.
its masculine no doubt
feminine
Masculine
masculine
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
Une école feminine
it is masculine so El