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Not in English. In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. A number of the languages from which English nouns come to us have masculine and feminine forms and in some of those languages, feminine nouns do end with a.
The word rate, like most words in English, does not come in masculine and feminine forms, there is just one form for both genders. It's just rate.
It is a Spanish or Italian variant of the feminine forms of John.
Mia cara, come stai?in the feminine and Mio caro, come stai? in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "My dear, how are you?"Specifically, the feminine possessive adjective mia and the masculine mio are "my". The feminine adjective/noun/pronoun cara and the masculine caro mean "dear" in this context. The interrogative comemeans "how". The verb stai translates as "(informal singular you) are/stand".The pronunciation will be "MEE-a KA-ra KO-mey STEYE" in the feminine and "MEE-o KA-ro KO-mey STEYE" in the masculine.
In English it is neither. Most of the words in English don't come with a gender. Cheese is neutral... an "it."
Come stai mi amico? in the masculine and Come stai mi amica? in the feminine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "How are you, my friend?"Specifically, the adverb come means "how." The verb stai means "(informal singular you) are." The feminine/masculine possessive adjective mi* means "my.' The masculine noun amico and the feminine amica respectively mean "(male) friend" and "(female) friend."The pronunciation is "KOH-meh steye** mee ah-MEE-koh" in the masculine and "KOH-meh steye* mee ah-MEE-kah" in the feminine.*The masculine possessive adjective actually is mio. The feminine possessive adjective actually is mia. But the final vowels a and o drop before a noun that begins with a vowel.**The sound is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
Belle is a feminine French adjective (the masculine being "beau"), which means "beautiful".
It depends on how you spell it: ב = in the בא = come, comes (present tense, masculine singular) בה = in her, in it (feminine)
"Disgustato" for a male and "Disgustata" for a female are Italian equivalents of the English word "disgusted."Specifically, the masculine adjective "disgustato" and the feminine "disgustata" come from the past participle of the infinitive "disgustare" ("to disgust"). The pronunciation of the masculine form is "DEE-sgoo-STAH-toh." The pronunciation of the feminine form is "DEE-sgoo-STAH-tah."
Come stai, bellissima? in the feminine and Come stai, bellissimo? in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "How are you, gorgeous?" Context makes clear which form suits. The respective pronunciations will be "KO-mey steye bel-LEES-see-ma" in the feminine and "KO-mey steye bel-LEES-see-mo" in the masculine in Italian.
Aggiungerti come amica in the feminine and aggiungerti come amico in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "add you as a friend." Context makes clear which form suits. The respective pronunciations will be "ad-DJOON-djer-tee KO-mey a-MEE-ka" in the feminine and "ad-DJOON-djey-tee KO-mey a-MEE-ko" in the masculine in Italian.
"Affamata" in the feminine and "affamato" in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "hungry."Specifically, the feminine adjective "affamata" and the masculine "affamato" come from the past participle of the infinitive "affamare," which means "to be very hungry, starving." The respective pronunciations are "AHF-fah-MAH-tah" and "AHF-fah-MAH-toh."