The Huntress.
According to the Lobo comics, Lobo killed his entire species, so there wouldn't be any female lobo's, but, in the mini-series Lobo's Back, Lobo gets reincarnated into a female form of himself for the duration of the 4 issues.
Published exclusively for DC Comics, that would be Red Tornado.Abigail Mathilda "Ma" Hunkel debuted as the Red Tornado in November 1940.
The Disney Princess franchise features the Disney female princess heroines. The franchise includes ten princesses from former Disney movies. The Disney Princess franchise was created in the late 1990s.
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It depends on which story. Batman has many many comics, television episodes, and several films. Predominantly, the most heroic female character is Batgirl, though she isn't in every story.
If you are referring specifically to scrawny action heroines, then they look like they don't work out because they don't.However, if you're referring to modern heroines in general, then your question is not true for all modern heroines. Look at Halle Barry in Catwoman, Milla Jovovic on Resident Evil, etc. Those women are in great physical shape, and although they are thin, you can tell they do work out.
Given the majority of those who purchase comics are (heterosexual) males there is a tradition of presenting female characters as sexually desirable to the male gaze. Heroines tend to be strongly sexualized (attractive, large breasts, tight outfits, etc.) because that is what the majority of comic-book buyers find visually pleasurable. If one day society accepts that a woman doesn't need to be beautiful to be interesting, then perhaps women will be represented in more diverse ways more often. Right now, though, muscles are considered "unfeminine" by most people, and thus unappealing to male readers. I think these narrow trends and ideas can be carried on by straight female readers as well, who may be more inclined to want to identify with skinny and stereotypically "beautiful" heroines, and thus prefer to read about them than more muscular or culturally "weird" ones.
Cuz they have super powers. 'Nuff said.
Shakespeare's heroines were his female characters.
Her name was Dala
The hollow muscular pear-shaped organ inside the female body is the uterus.
Male have muscular body feature. Muscular , co'z weight lifter. Female ready for sex all the time/
Most men prefer for women to have muscular bodies.
Supergirl, Batgirl, there are several in the Legion of Super-Heroes- such as Saturn Girl ( super telepathy- hypnotism) Phantom Girl ( invisibility) etc. For some reason female Super-heroines were never as popular as their male counterparts- for example with one or two minor exceptions- Tarzeela- there was never a female- Tarzan type character, at least in the main lines of comics.
'Fantomah' in 1940 , Jungle Comics #2 , was the first female super-heroine to appear in comics .
Yep, both male and female can have it. I am a female and I have MD.
bo ba be by me