Yes, there are. The female is referred to as a cow, the male as a bull. and the young is called a calf.
The word ox or oxen can actually refer to both male and female bovines. A female ox is a cow, the male ox is a bull.
An ox is a neutered male bovine. The opposite gender to an ox is a female bovine, commonly known as a cow.
A steer is a castrated male bovine (or bull) that is raised for meat. An ox is a castrated male bovine (can also be female too) that is trained and used for pulling carts, wagons, plows, etc.
A female ox is called a cow. Oxen are typically castrated male cattle used for draft purposes, while cows are female cattle used for milk production and breeding. The term "ox" specifically refers to a working steer or bullock that has been trained as a draft animal.
A young male ox is typically called a bullock.
The word ox or oxen can actually refer to both male and female bovines. A female ox is a cow, the male ox is a bull.
The word ox or oxen can actually refer to both male and female bovines; the term for male is bull, the female is cow.
An ox is a neutered male bovine. The opposite gender to an ox is a female bovine, commonly known as a cow.
Ox issued for domestic use in southeast Asia, South America and Australia. A male ox is known as a steer (occasionally a bull if not castrated, like with most oxen found in southeastern Asia) while a female ox is known as a cow or heifer.
A steer is a castrated male bovine (or bull) that is raised for meat. An ox is a castrated male bovine (can also be female too) that is trained and used for pulling carts, wagons, plows, etc.
A female ox is called a cow. Oxen are typically castrated male cattle used for draft purposes, while cows are female cattle used for milk production and breeding. The term "ox" specifically refers to a working steer or bullock that has been trained as a draft animal.
A young male ox is typically called a bullock.
The feminine form of "ox" is "cow." In general, the term "ox" refers to a castrated male bovine, while "cow" specifically denotes a female bovine that has typically had at least one calf. In contrast, the term "heifer" refers to a young female bovine that has not yet had a calf.
Cows are always female. A male cow is a bull, and a calf is born of a bull father and cow mother. Technically, an ox is a castrated male, but any bovine draught annimal is commonly called 'ox' or 'oxen'.
The masculine form of "ox" is simply "ox." In the context of livestock, an ox refers specifically to a male bovine that has been trained for draft work, typically castrated to make it more docile. The female counterpart is called a "cow." In general usage, "ox" can refer to both genders when discussing the species broadly.
The opposite gender for an ox is cow, specifically a female ox.
A cow does not change into an ox during ANY point of her life. A cow is a mature female bovine that has had at least 2 calves; an ox is a castrated male (otherwise called a steer or a bullock) that is trained for pulling carts, plows, wagons, etc.