In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'cockerel' is a gender specific noun for a young male chicken.
The noun 'pullet' is a gender specific noun for a young female chicken.
A cockerel is a young rooster. A pullet is a young hen.
Pullet
Pullet
Die Katze, feminine
Postmistress
πίστης [pistis] (feminine)πιστότης [pistotis] (feminine)
Feminine for beautiful, pulchra.
Oeuf is a French word. It is masculine.
Feminine for cockerel is hen.
Hen
I saw a cockerel in the farm and the cockerel cocked really loud until the cockerel was out of breath. oh no..... The cockerel could not breath so I called the vet and the cockerel was survived.
Roosters kept on picking on the little cockerel.
How do you eat cockerel? There really is not much difference between a cockerel and a hen when used for cooking. The male.
Hen.
gallo
Un coq
A young cock, or rooster, is called a cockerel. Cockerel is a diminutive form of the word cock, which is English for male chicken. The word originates from the Old English, Old French, and Old Norse word for male chicken, which were cocc, coc, and kokkr, respectively.
the rooster = the cockerel = le coqle coq
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. Species : Gallus gallus domesticus = Chicken (common gender noun for both male and female) Male : rooster Female : hen
it's feminine - uneRuler in french is a feminine word