a reindeer is "un renne" in French.
Reindeer is translated 'un renne' (masc.) in French.
"un renne" is a reindeer in French.
There is no difference between a reindeer and a caribou. They are two names for the same speciaes. The word caribou is derived from the native American Mi'kmaq word for this animal, as rendered by the French. The term reindeer is of Norse origin.
Reindeer
Yes, the word 'reindeer' is a noun, a word for a type of mammal; a word for a thing.
The translation of "reindeer" in French is "renne."
There were many reindeer in the forest. The reindeer pulled Santa's sleigh.
The singular possessive for reindeer is reindeer's.
Renne is a French equivalent of 'reindeer'. The word in French is pronounced 'rehn'. It's a masculine gender noun whose definite article is 'le' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'un' ['a, one'].Rennes is the plural form. It also is pronounced 'rehn'. But its definite article is 'les' ['the'], and its indefinte 'des' ['some'].
Yes, and don't let those scientists fool you, caribou just a French-Canadian name for reindeer. They are not different species, reindeer and caribou should be called "reindeer". Caribou are wild reindeer (see Wikipedia).
Proper because it is only one word ad rein doesn't describe the deer reindeer is one
Did you perhaps mean "Rudolph" as in the reindeer?
Reindeer