Most feminine words have e's at the end. All feminine words in french have the article: la, or une. Masculine words have: le, or un. The plural is: les.
In French, you can often identify feminine words by the presence of the suffixes such as -e, -ion, -tion, -té, -elle, -ude, etc. However, the best way to learn the gender of a word is to memorize it along with the vocabulary.
In French, "préférer" is the infinitive form of the verb "to prefer." When conjugated in the present tense, there is no distinction between masculine and feminine forms. For example, "je préfère" (I prefer) can be used by speakers of any gender, unlike adjectives in French which have masculine and feminine forms.
masculine
Douce is feminine. The masculine is 'doux'.
La salade is feminine
In French, "croissant" is a masculine noun.
The French spelling is "intrépide" (no difference between the masculine and feminine forms).
In French, "préférer" is the infinitive form of the verb "to prefer." When conjugated in the present tense, there is no distinction between masculine and feminine forms. For example, "je préfère" (I prefer) can be used by speakers of any gender, unlike adjectives in French which have masculine and feminine forms.
Feminine
masculine
'au' is singular = à+le (and it's masculine), 'aux' is plural = à+les (it can be masculine or feminine)
feminine
masculine
Feminine
balle is feminine in french / ballon is masculine
In French the country Mali is masculine.
The feminine form of the French adjective "national" is "nationale".
It's masculine. Beef in French is le boeuf.