In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'stag' is a word for a male deer. The nouns for a female deer are cow, hind, or doe.
Example sentence: The hunter chased the doe.
The opposite word for "stag" is "doe."
A stag is a male deer, but it also used to describe a male attending a party without a date.
The word doe is a feminine noun for a deer; the masculine is buck.
The word stag refers to a male horse that was gelded after he has reached the age of maturity, has been used for breeding before he was gelded or a gelding (no matter his age at the time of gelding) who has stallion like behavior.
masculine
Huntress I think.
The noun 'hunter' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female who hunts.An obsolete word specific for a female who hunts is huntress.
Stag is not a portuguese word.
The opposite word for "stag" is "doe."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, for example:The gender specific noun for a male deer is a stag.The gender specific noun for a female deer is a doe.The noun 'deer' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
huntress
The feminine noun for a woman going stag to a dance is a "lone wolf." Just kidding! The term you're looking for is a "lone doe." So if you see a lady hitting the dance floor solo, you can call her a lone doe strutting her stuff!
I chased her until she caught me. The dawn chased the night away. The cat chased the bird to no avail.
doe/stag
Chased is the past tense and past participle of the verb chase:The dog chased the rabbit into the bushes.
In French, the word "émission" is feminine.
The word "purchased" has two syllables. It is pronounced as pur-chased.