No, it;s a male deer in English.
Buck is a homograph because it has two meanings but identical spelling and pronunciation.
"The buck stops here." "He shot the seven point buck." "He asked to borrow a buck."
The noun buck is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an adult male deer or rabbit; an informal word for a dollar. The word buck is also a verb: buck, bucks, bucking, bucked.
It has one syllable.
I have heard buck used in reference to a young male slave.
'Bad Buck' of Santa Ynez - 1915 was released on: USA: 21 May 1915 USA: 16 January 1924 (re-release)
There is one syllable.
Buckteeth, bucktoothed
buck
buck
How does the man in the red sweater train Buck.
There are three syllables in the word Buckingham. They are: Buck-ing-ham.