Gazelle are specifically named in Deuteronomy 12: "... eat as much of the meat as you want, as if it were gazelle or deer ..."
However, while some animals are forbidden, the fact that an animal is not forbidden does not automatically make its meat kosher, it just means that it can be kosher. The animal must still be slaughtered properly, butchered properly, and none of "the thigh" (generally defined as "the sciatic nerve and its branches", which in practice works out to "just to be safe, don't eat the back half of the animal") is kosher. Meat "offered to idols" is also not kosher, and "all fat is The Lord's" (so don't eat it).
Yes, but no-one knows where to cut the neck so no-one does it.
For one thing, a proper kosher slaughter requires the accurate identification of a precise location on the neck.
Need I say more ?
Yes.
Yes, wildebeest (aka gnu) are kosher, if they are slaughtered properly, deveined, have the sciatic nerve removed, and salted to remove the blood.
Wildebeest is the plural of wildebeest
wildebeest are not dangerous unless you provote them. wildebeest are not carniverous but they are herbivores.
Collective nouns are a herd of wildebeest, an implausibility of wildebeest.
diet of a wildebeest
The scientific name for a wildebeest is Connochaetes taurinus.
The wildebeest drinks water.
There are no perfect rhymes for the word wildebeest.
Black wildebeest was created in 1780.
Blue wildebeest was created in 1823.
yes if they are in the same place.
Female wildebeest or gnus are called cows.