Yep. There are plenty of male nurses. No problem. Why not!
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun nurse is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female who nurses.
It depends on the type of nurse. If the nurse is a hospital attendant or medical nurse, the word is: Mumared (ممرض) for a male nurse and Mumareda (ممرضة) for a female nurse. If the nurse is just a general guardian but does not perform any medical activities, such as a babysitter or a wet nurse, the word is: Marbi (مربي) for a male nurse and Marbiyya (مربية) for a female nurse.
Perhaps it's a version of 'banaltra', a nurse? The 'ban' part indicates female so a (male) nurse?
a female nurse = achót (אחות) a male nurse = ach (אח) to nurse = tipél (טיפל)
The word is fol-strais (this is used for male and female ostriches).
Whether male or female, the word pilot is used.
There is no different word for a female wolf. The same word is used for both male and female. wolf (say: volf)
Both, but mostle females.
The word boss can be either a female boss or a male boss. It of course used to only be a male that was the boss which is why people sometimes assume that the boss is male but that is no longer the case.
female and male
The antonym of the word female is male.
The noun 'teacher' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.