Male is a boar.
Female is a sow.
Young is a piglet.
Sow is actually the correct feminine term for a pig. A female pig that has never had babies is called a gilt, and a male pig is a boar.
Sow - female Boar - Male Piglets - Young
The feminine gender of "boar" is "sow." A boar refers to a male pig, while a sow refers to a female pig, especially one that has given birth. In general, these terms are used to distinguish between the sexes in domestic pigs and wild boar species.
Sow IS female/feminine. The male pig/swine is a boar.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The gender specific noun for a female of a species is sow.The corresponding gender specific noun for a male is boar.The gender specific nouns, boar and sow, are used for:badgersbearsboarsguinea pigshedgehogshogspandaspigsprairie dogsraccoons
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The noun for a female is sow; the noun for a male is a boar.The gender specific nouns, boar and sow, are used for:badgersbearsboarsguinea pigshedgehogshogspandaspigsprairie dogsraccoons
Boar is the masculine form. The female is sow.
The feminine gender of "votary" is "votress."
The feminine gender for the word "heir" is "heiress."
The feminine gender of tutor is "tutora" in Spanish.
There isn't one... the word 'enemy' has no gender.
The gender noun for a female boar is "sow." While "boar" specifically refers to male wild pigs, "sow" is used to denote the female counterpart. In domestic settings, "pig" can refer to either gender, but the terms "boar" and "sow" are more precise in distinguishing between males and females.