Bull calf, steer calf, yearling bull, or steer.
Definitely not. Heifers are young female bovines, never male. The opposite of a heifer would be a young bull, which is a young male bovine.
When castrated he will be called a steer no matter how young.
There is no such thing as a male cow. A cow is a mature female bovine that had had a calf, and a bull is an intact male bovine. So the young offspring of a bull and cow is a calf.
A bull is an intact (non-neutered) male bovine, and a steer or bullock is a castrated male bovine.
Heifer - a female-young cow A bovine - any member of the species, male or female.
A steer is a castrated male bovine (or bull) that is raised for meat. An ox is a castrated male bovine (can also be female too) that is trained and used for pulling carts, wagons, plows, etc.
A Bovine is a type of cattle like a Buffalo Or a cow.
A young bovine that has not had an offspring is called a heifer.
"Bovine" refers to cows in general. A male cow which has been castrated is called an ox. The plural of ox is oxen.
a calf
Bullock.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'calf' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female young bovine.The gender specific noun for a young female calf that has not yet given birth is heifer.The gender specific nouns for a male bovine are:a male castrated before reaching puberty is steer;an intact mature male bovine is bull;a male castrated after puberty is stag.