In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.
The gender specific noun to address a male is sir.
The gender specific noun to address a female is madam or ma'am.
"Fields" is neither masculine nor feminine. There is no masculine or feminine form.
what is Sir Isaic Newton
Masculine: buck Feminine: doe
Sir Isaac newton.
Sir Isaac who
Ms
The female equivalent of Sir is Dame
Signora is a feminine form of 'Signor'. It's a feminine gender noun that means 'Madam, Ma'am, lady'. Its masculine equivalent, 'Signor', means 'Sir, gentleman'. They're pronounced 'see-NYOH-rah' and 'see-NYOHR', respectively.
"Good night, Sir" is an English equivalent of "Buenas noches, Señor."Specifically, the feminine adjective "buenas" means "good." The feminine noun "noches" means "nights." The masculine noun "Señor" means "Sir."The pronunciation is "BWEH-nah-SNOH-tcheh seh-NYOHR."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender specific noun of polite address for a male is sir.The gender specific noun of polite address for a female is madam or ma'am.
"Sister" or "the sister" may be English equivalents of the French phrase la soeur.Specifically, the feminine singular definite article lameans "the." The feminine noun soeur means "sister." The pronunciation will be similar to the English noun "sir."
feminine
feminine, i believe
Yes, sir is an English equivalent of 'a la orden'. The preposition 'a' means 'to'. The feminine definite article 'la' means 'the'. The feminine noun 'orden'means 'order'. So a literal translation is 'At your command' or 'Upon your order'. All together, they're pronounced 'ah lah OHR-dehn'.
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
Feminine
feminine