"Heroes" is the plural of "hero." The female equivalent is "heroine."
A hero is someone who is admired for doing a brave deed, or who is the most important character in a story, play, etc.
I think you mean heroine, and the masculine would be hero. If you mean the drug, it is a neutral.
strong hero
Semper tuo heroi ero (i'm assuming that you, or the hero is singular, if its not then replace 'heroi' with heroibus and 'ero' with erimus)
The French word for 'hero' is heros. It's a masculine gender noun that begins with an aspirated 'h'. The form of its definite article therefore is 'le', which means 'the'.
What is the word 'hero' when translated from English to Japanese Eiyuu (英雄), sounds like A U desu.
A jinketsu is the Japanese word for hero. Another word is hiro.
A suffix for the word hero is -ine, as in heroine. A heroine is the feminine version of the word hero.
There is no word spelled as 'auorine'. It is not in the dictionary. However, there's a word called heroine. This word is in reference to a female hero.
The word hero came from the Latin language. The word hero is derived from the Latin word hero's and its first known use was in the 14th century.
A four letter word that means winner can be hero, but it does not exactly mean winner.
I can't find the word as spelled.It could be an laoch (the warrior, hero, champion)?
The word 'hero' is not a verb. The word 'hero' is a noun, a word for a person.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A verb is a word for an action, an occurrence, or a state of being.Example: The hero came home. (the noun 'hero' is the subject of the sentence, the action is 'came', what the hero did)
Rizal is the surname of a Filipino hero, one of the national heroes of the Philippines.
Shujaa (if you mean hero) Askari (if you mean soldier-like) Mpiganaji (if you mean a fighter)
I think you mean heroine, and the masculine would be hero. If you mean the drug, it is a neutral.
No. Hero is a noun. However, heroic can be a describing word.
A character looked upon as a romantic hero, named after the poet Lord Byron