Yes.
A sponsor can be male or female, and must be at least age 16, a Catholic in good standing, and confirmed.
Confirmation does not normally require a sponsor, although most bishops ask for one. In the case that your bishop requires a sponsor, he would issue the rules for that, normally any confirmed Catholic in good standing with the Church.
No, a sponsor can be male or female, so a boy can have a female sponsor and a girl can have male sponsor if they choose. The sponsor should be practicing Catholic who has received Confirmation, age 16 or more, and not a parent.
The female Christian saint martyred at Chalcedon is Saint Euphemia. She is venerated as a martyr and saint in the Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Oriental Orthodox Churches.
A female has never been ordained to "major orders" deacon/priest in the Roman Catholic Church, the Uniate Churches (Eastern Catholic) or Orthodox Church
No, that will never happen. Pope John Paul II stated clearly that females would never be allowed in the priesthood. The two requirements to be pope are - must be a male Catholic.
No, there are female rabbis, even amongst the Orthodox. (Orthodox female rabbis aren't pulpit rabbis.)
If you mean priests, no. There are no female Catholic priests
male six are powerful or male
Answer 1Reform Judaism has Confirmation for 16-yr-olds. Yes Reform Jews do have a Confirmation ceremony for 16 year olds. You can even research it online.Answer 2I personally have never heard of any Jew (Reform/Conservative/Orthodox, etc.) being confirmed in any Jewish capacity. Confirmation applies exclusively to the Christian Church. A Jewish male comes of age when he is 13 at a Bar Mitzvah and a Jewish female comes of age at 12, which some denominations celebrate as a Bat Mitzvah.
-- The modern Reform and Reconstructionist Jewish movements ordain female rabbis. -- The Conservative Jewish movement began to ordain women within the past 20 years. -- Orthodox Judaism has never ordained women.
The name Daria is the female variant of the masculine name Darius, which is an ancient name of Persian origin. Daria means the sea and maintains possessions well. Daria is a saint of the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.