that means the girl of fiance
The feminine of fiance, is simply fiance.
Fiancee is the feminine version.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender specific noun for a male who is engaged to be married is referred to as the "fiancé" of the prospective bride.The gender specific noun for a female who is engaged to be married is referred to as the "fiancée" of the prospective groom.
Fiancee is feminine and fiance is masculine
The masculine word (or male person) is fiance.The feminine word (or female person) is fiancee.In English, some people like to show the French accents:fiancé (male)fiancée (female)
The opposite of Fiancee (female) is Fiance.
Officially, it would be a girl ... it's a French word, so the extra "e" at the end means it's a feminine noun. A male would be a "fiance." But lots of people don't know that rule, so "fiance" is often used for both -- and occasionally "fiancee" is too.
The origin of the word fiance is french and is the past participle of fiancer. The word means "a promise" and is based on the latin word of fidere meaning trust.
fiance
The origin of the word fiance is mid 19th century, from French, past participle of fiancer 'betroth,' from Old French fiance 'a promise,' based on Latin fidere 'to trust.'
In French, the word "Γ©mission" is feminine.
No. Fiance is the man you are going to marry. Husband is the man you did marry.
The French word "sorte" is feminine.
The French word "aide" is feminine.