In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. Some examples of gender nouns for a female are:
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples are:
nouns for a male
father
brother
son
uncle
king
stallion
buck
bull
boar
cock
nouns for a female
mother
sister
daughter
aunt
queen
mare
doe
cow
sow
hen
common gender nouns (words for a male or a female)
parent
sibling
child
relative
regent
horse
deer
buffalo
bear
chicken
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female; common gender nouns for word that can be a male or a female; neuter nouns for things that have no gender.
Examples of gender specific nouns for males:
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
Examples of gender specific nouns for a female are:
aunt
cow
czarina
daughter
dam
dame
doe
empress
girl
hen
lady
lass
mare
mom
mother
niece
queen
sister
vixen
woman
The gender specific pronouns for a female are she, her, hers, herself.
Verbal nouns, called gerunds, are the present participle of a verb (the -ing word) that functions as a noun in a sentence. Examples are:actingaimingarguingarmingbalancingbeggingbettingbowlingcallingcasingcastingcoatingcurlingdancingdatingdrawingdyingeatingeasingelectingeveningfacingfinishingfishingflashingfurnishingsgardeninggradinggreetingguessinghazinghelpinghousinghuntingicinginningironingjoiningjokingjumpingkillingkissingknittingknockinglandinglikinglininglodginglongingmatingmistingmountingmovingmurmuringmusingnestingnudgingnursingnurturingofferingopeningovercomingoverseeingpaintingpartingplowingpurgingrisingrubbingrulingrunningrushingsavingsscoldingsewingsolderingtailoringtellingtinkeringtoolingtutoringundoingunveilingupbringingurgingvacationingvanishingvaultingventingwailingwantingweavingwebbingweddingweltingwordingyearningyellingyodelingzoning
Content words are words that give a sentence its meaning. Examples of content words include nouns, adjectives and verbs.
taba si jason
Abstract nouns that start with Q are: qualityquandaryqueryquestquipquirkquotaquotient
shixty five shixty five shixty five shixty five shixty five shixty five shixty five
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Examples of nouns for a male are:brotherbuckbullfatherkingmanroosterramstallionuncle
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Examples of nouns for a male are:brotherbuckbullfatherkingmanroosterramstallionuncle
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. Examples of gender specific nouns for a female are: daughter doe girl hen mare mother sister sow queen woman
Examples of nouns are:anarchyanimositybeautybraverycommunismconceptcuriositydemocracydisciplineemotionfeelingfreedomfriendlinessfriendshipfungoalHappinessHatehonestyhonor
The masculine form of "auteur" in French is "auteur" and the feminine form is "autrice."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: baron/baroness boar/sow boy/girl brother/sister buck/doe bull/cow count/countess father/mother gentleman/lady groom/bride husband/wife king/queen lord/lady man/woman nephew/niece peacock/peahen rooster/hen stallion/mare uncle/aunt widower/widow
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.Examples:mother, fatherbull, cowsister, brotherking, queenmare, stallionuncle, auntOr common gender nouns for people or things that can be male or female. Examples:parentcattlefriendteacherhorsedriverPronouns are also gender specific or common gender words. Examples:pronouns that take the place of a noun for a male: he, him, his, himselfpronouns that take the place of a noun for a female: she, her, hers, herselfpronouns that take the place of nous for a male or a female: they, them, theirs, their, themselves.
Examples of common nouns:appleboatcouchdaggereggfoamgorillaharpicejoykneelollipopmothernotionoperapurposequailrocksteakteacherurchinvalleyworkbenchyogurtzoologist
Examples of abstract nouns for positive qualities are:affectionbeautycharmdiplomacyeducationfungallantryhappinessintelligencejoy
la = the (feminine) It is the article "the" used for feminine nouns (Spanish nouns are either masculine or feminine and determined by traditional use, not by any particular qualities.) Examples: la escuela - the school el autobús - the bus
Examples of nouns that are things are:applebraverycowdresseducationfudgegreenhouseicejokekneelettermousenounonionpennyquestionrosesteelturtle
In English, nouns do not have gender as they don't have inherent gender associations. However, some languages do assign gender to nouns. For example, in Spanish, the gender of a noun can be masculine or feminine. Here are five examples of each: Masculine: Carro (car) Libro (book) Perro (dog) Árbol (tree) Sol (sun) Feminine: Casa (house) Flor (flower) Mesa (table) Silla (chair) Luna (moon)