A doe can be a female rabbit or a female deer.
"Hoofs" is not a word. The correct form is hooves. You would say, "The doe mended her off-springs hooves."
A homonym for doe is dough.
A buck is a male deer, and a female deer is called a doe
nanny Doe.
A female adult rabbit is called a doe or a jill. No special name for one that has had babies (or bunny, kit, kitten, leveret, nestling)
A female deer is called a doe.An example sentence with this word is: The doe watched her newborn closely.Another example sentence is: We fed the doe some food yesterday.
Please be advised that I, Jane Doe, am presently employed at John Doe.
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.
Ls
Example sentence - We quietly watched the doe and her fawn walk in the meadow.
"Doe's" is not the word does. It is a possessive word of the word Doe. A doe is a female deer. Here is an example of its use. "The doe's son was Bambi. She loved her son. But, she was killed in a fire. Bambi has a father. Now the doe's son is being cared for by his father."
John Doe denies stealing the money.
No. It lacks a main verb, and "invocation" needs an article. The ( or an) invocation will be led by John Doe.
The words 'John Doe' constitute what is known as a 'sentence interupter.' The flow of the sentence is interrupted by the words 'John Doe.' Go ahead and read the sentence aloud without the words 'John Doe' to get the feel of the flow of the sentence. Now read it again with the words 'John Doe'and you'll get the mildly jarring sense of the interruption. This is not to suggest that sentence interrupters are necessarily bad. They can be used to great effect as a form of emphasis. But they should be used sparingly. Sentence interrupters are set off by commas fore and aft. OK, I'll settle down. Put commas before and after a sentence interrupter. Example: 'One of the parties, John Doe, entered my ...' Note: In rare instances a sentence interrupter can be punctuated by dashes rather than commas.
Jane Doe expounded her philosophy clearly and energetically.
Yesterday, I saw a doe with her fawn in this very meadow.
Jane Doe predicted the collapse of the currency.