Bullock.
The male counterpart of a heifer would be a bullock or a young virgin bull.
A bullock is a castrated male cattle that is raised for beef.
A bull is an intact (non-neutered) male bovine, and a steer or bullock is a castrated male bovine.
Mare
Stirk
When a cow gives birth the animal is called a calf, as the calf grows the name changes depending on the sex of the animal. A female is called a hiefer and a male is called a bullock
A young "male cow" (which is non-existent, by the way) is called a bullock or a young bull or, if not of weaning age, a bull calf. That is, if the so-called "male cow" is intact. If not, it is called a steer calf if castrated and is still relying on its mother's milk, or simply a steer after weaning or after it reaches around a year of age.
No. A bull is an intact male that is used for breeding. A bullock is a European term for a castrated bull, which North American cattlemen call a steer.
a bullock is a castrated male young cattle. the opposite is a heifer which has not had a calf. a cow is a female cattle which had bore a calf while a bull is a male cattle which has had a cow. Bull is short for bullock and a bull is not castrated. A steer is a castrated male. The opposite gender of bullock is cow. Bull and cow.
Concidering I am 50 and male, Sandra Bullock
One would have to go to a farmers market to find a male bovine bullock. They can be purchased in auctions by farmers and used for a number of purposes including slaughter for its meat.