Webster's 1828 dictionary provides different definitions of "ox," including "male of the bovine genus" as well as both the males and females when speaking of wild animals of this kind.

Date
1828
Type
Book
Source
Noah Webster
Non-LDS
Hearsay
Direct
Reprint
Reference

Noah Webster, 1828 Webster's Dictionary, (The Editorium, 1828), "Ox," accessed March 6, 2023

Scribe/Publisher
Noah Webster, The Editorium
People
Noah Webster
Audience
Reading Public
Transcription

OX, noun plural oxen. pronoun ox'n.

The male of the bovine genus of quadrupeds, castrated and grown to his size or nearly so. The young male is called in America a steer. The same animal not castrated is called a bull. These distinctions are well established with us in regard to domestic animals of this genus. When we speak of wild animals of this kind, ox is sometimes applied both to the male and female, and in zoology, the same practice exists in regard to the domestic animals. Sop in common usage, a pair of bulls yoked may be sometimes called oxen. We never apply the name ox to the cow or female of the domestic kind. Oxen in the plural may comprehend both the male and female.

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