A hero typically refers to a male protagonist who displays courage, strength, and morality in the face of adversity, while a heroine is a female protagonist who embodies similar qualities. The distinction is rooted in traditional gender roles and archetypes, although in modern storytelling, the terms are often used interchangeably to refer to leading characters regardless of gender.
While modern speakers generally use the word hero to describe a central protagonist of either gender, traditionally the word was reserved for males. A female was called a heroine. There were some differences in the way male versus female protagonists were generally portrayed but again, modern usage tends to disregard gender.
A hero is a male, and a heroine is a female.
Hero is male while heroine is female
A heroine is a female hero. Heroin is an illegal drug.
The opposite of heroine is hero.
It seems that no one loves the hero and the heroine. Why are they the hero and heroine then?
The masculine form of heroine is hero. Heroine is just a woman superhero.
A male heroine is called a hero.
I think you mean heroine, and the masculine would be hero. If you mean the drug, it is a neutral.
Hero?
No. Heroine is a noun, a person (the female gender of hero). The same word, heroic, is used as an adjective for heroine or hero.
Heroine refers to a female hero.
A suffix for the word hero is -ine, as in heroine. A heroine is the feminine version of the word hero.
heroine is a woman hero.
the hero