A buck. The doe is the female deer and the male is a buck.
Buck is the masculine........a male deer (the female is a doe).
The term "hamster" does not have a specific feminine or masculine form. It is a unisex noun that refers to both male and female hamsters.
"Fields" is neither masculine nor feminine. There is no masculine or feminine form.
Masculine: tom Feminine: molly, queen, pussy
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a female goose is goose.The noun for a male goose is gander.
Buck is the masculine........a male deer (the female is a doe).
? Manny. If you're referring to goats, the female is a doe, and the male is a buck
The term "hamster" does not have a specific feminine or masculine form. It is a unisex noun that refers to both male and female hamsters.
Buck
The word doe is a feminine noun for a deer; the masculine is buck.
The word doe is a feminine noun for a deer; the masculine is buck.
Masculine = stagFeminine = doe
Masculine: billy, buck, buckling Feminine: nanny, doe, doeling
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a male mouse is buck; the noun for a female mouse is doe.
A male rabbit is a buck, and a female is a doe.
that is the masculine form
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun for a male mouse is buck. The noun for a female mouse doe.