un hamster is masculine. To indicate a female, you say 'un hamster femelle', but the piece of sentence is still masculine.
The feminine word for "rouge" in French is "rouge", as it is the same in both masculine and feminine forms.
The masculine form of "mince" in French is "mince" as well. Both the masculine and feminine forms of the adjective "mince" remain the same.
Solitaire is written the same in both masculine and feminine forms.
Both feminine and masculine genders exist in French.Specifically, all nouns exhibit either feminine or masculine gender. In addition, all adjectives have feminine or masculine forms. The past participles of verbs also will have feminine or masculine forms depending upon the gender of the speaker.
The word "captain" in French is "capitaine" and it is masculine in gender.
The masculine form of the French word "gris" is "gris." It remains the same in both masculine and feminine forms.
In French, "préférer" is the infinitive form of the verb "to prefer." When conjugated in the present tense, there is no distinction between masculine and feminine forms. For example, "je préfère" (I prefer) can be used by speakers of any gender, unlike adjectives in French which have masculine and feminine forms.
Libyen in the masculine and libyennein the feminine are French equivalents of the English word "Libyan."Specifically, the French words are the feminine and masculine forms of an adjective or a noun. The noun may be preceded by the feminine definite article la ("the") and the masculine le or by the feminine indefinite article une("a, one") or the masculine un. The pronunciation is "leeb-yah" in the masculine and "leeb-yehn" in the feminine.
"Premier" and "Première" may be French equivalents of "first."Specifically, the masculine "premier" and the feminine "première" represent the singular forms of the French adjective. The respective plural forms are "premiers" and "premières." But the singular and masculine forms are pronounced the same in the singular and the plural: "preh-myeh" in the masculine and "preh-myehr" in the feminine.
The French spelling is "intrépide" (no difference between the masculine and feminine forms).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'hamster' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female of the species.The gender specific noun for a female hamster is doe.The gender specific noun for a male hamster is buck.
The masculine form of the French adjective "original" is "original." French adjectives do not have separate masculine and feminine forms; they remain the same regardless of the gender of the noun they describe.