The female of a bull - is called a cow.
In a way, but remember male cows don't exist, unless they are male and look like a cow, which is often if you find a "bull" that looks like a cow but has testicles where there should be an udder. Ultimately, bulls are bulls, and are the much more masculine counterpart of the female bovine (the cow).
The answer to the analogy "bull is to cow as hen is to" is rooster. In this analogy, a bull is a male counterpart to a cow, just as a rooster is a male counterpart to a hen. Bulls and cows are both bovine animals, while roosters and hens are both poultry animals.
No. A bull is the male counterpart of a cow, not a "type" of cow. Bulls aren't cows, technically speaking.
The female counterpart of a monk is a Bikkhuni and Hershang in Chinese.
There is no such thing as a "female lad." The term "lad" typically refers to a young man, so it does not have a female counterpart.
The word ox or oxen can actually refer to both male and female bovines; the term for male is bull, the female is cow.
The female counterpart of patriarch is 'matriarch'.
The female counterpart of a stag is a doe.
The feminine form of a bull is a cow. Bulls are mature intact males used for breeding cows and heifers, and cows are mature female bovines that have had at least two calves.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. Since a bullock can refer to both a steer and a young bull, the female counterpart of a young bull would be a heifer. But for a steer, that would be a spayed heifer.
what are the names of the girl chipmunks in the movie Alvin and the chipmunks
A countess.
Mesdames.
In a way, but remember male cows don't exist, unless they are male and look like a cow, which is often if you find a "bull" that looks like a cow but has testicles where there should be an udder. Ultimately, bulls are bulls, and are the much more masculine counterpart of the female bovine (the cow).
The answer to the analogy "bull is to cow as hen is to" is rooster. In this analogy, a bull is a male counterpart to a cow, just as a rooster is a male counterpart to a hen. Bulls and cows are both bovine animals, while roosters and hens are both poultry animals.
feminine term of villain
No. A bull is the male counterpart of a cow, not a "type" of cow. Bulls aren't cows, technically speaking.