The feminine form is materteral, referring to an aunt. Avuncular refers to an uncle, that which is like an uncle.
The established feminine counterpart to "avuncular," which derives from the Latin for "grandfather" (avus) and pertains, strictly speaking, to a maternal uncle, is "materteral." The latter was originally intended to a more humorous effect than the former, which is rather a historical index of patriarchal traditions of authority whereby a mother's brother carries more intrafamilial clout than the mother herself, the father being sufficiently respected to do without the succor of siblings. The Latin for paternal aunt and uncle is, respectively, "amita" and "patruus." For the sake of homology or chiasmus, it seems to me that the feminine counterpart should be derived from "amita" instead of "matertera," if one is to accurately re-map each term onto a matriarchal power structure. Unfortunately, the Oxford English Dictionary does not recognize "amital" or "amitous" or "amitular."
Gender nouns are words that tell you what the person or animal is but also what gender that person or animal is. Example: Parents, neutral Father, masculine gender Mother, feminine gender Chicken, neutral Rooster, masculine Hen, feminine Pilot, neutral aviator, masculine aviatrix, feminine Cattle, neutral Bull, masculine Cow, feminine
None-gender neutral
None-gender neutral
A neutral pronoun does not show gender. In English, "it" is neutral. "He" is masculine and "she" is feminine.
Neither. It is neutral in gender.
The word "Greek" applies to masculine, feminine, and neutral. There is no separate feminine form.
There is none, it is a neutral word.
There is no feminine gender of the word "cub." Cub is neutral in English, so it is used for male and female cubs.
Gender-neutral diction allows both the masculine and feminine genders to participate in any given situation.
Gender is genderless (in English) and as a reference to the sex of a person.
It is a neutral or male term. Negress is the feminine version.