Assuming this is a Spanish language question, "masculinity" and "femininity" are purely a linguistic device. A table (la mesa) is not inherently female. A shoe (el zapato) is not inherently male. It is just part of the language. That being said, things that are directly male of female are referred to in the appropriate gender in the language, i.e. el hombre, la mujer.
Feminine
This is dependent on whether the thing you are referring to as yours is masculine, feminine or plural. If it is masculine the word "mon" is used. If is is feminine the word "ma" is used. If it is plural the word "mes" is used regardless of whether the object is feminine or masculine.
Mojado (for a masculine object or person) or mojada (for a feminine object or person).
its masculine no doubt
Masculine
masculine
feminine
The word "universidad" is feminine in Spanish.
The feminine essa or the masculine esso as a subject, the masculine gli or the feminine le as an indirect pronoun, and the feminine la or the masculine lo as an object pronoun are Italian equivalents of the English word "it." Context makes clear which choice suits. The respective pronunciations will be "ES-sa" or "ES-so" as a subject, "lyee" or "ley" as an indirect object, and "la" or "lo" as an object pronoun in Italian.
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
Une école feminine
it is masculine so El