Estudiante (female) and estudiante (male) are both spelled the same way in Spanish. Gender is usually indicated by the article used before the noun or adjective. For example, la estudiante (female) and el estudiante (male).
The singular form of "la estudiante" is "el estudiante" when referring to a male student and "la estudiante" when referring to a female student.
"Estudiante" is a gender-neutral noun in Spanish, meaning that it can be used to refer to both male and female students.
You would say "Soy un estudiante de España."
In French, "my cousins" is written as "mes cousins" for male cousins or a mix of male and female cousins, and "mes cousines" for female cousins only.
The phrase "este es mi amigo" is gender-neutral and can be used to refer to a male or female friend. The word "amigo" is generally used for both male and female friends in Spanish.
The Spanish word for student is 'estudiantes'. This is the plural form of 'estudiante'. The word 'estudiante' can refer to either a male or female student.
Student is "estudiante"; just as in English, in this particular case there is no distinction between male and female forms. You can clarify that it's a female, for example, using the article, i.e., "la estudiante".
If the student is male, he's el estudiante or el alumno. If the student is female, she's la estudiante or la alumna.
The Spanish word for a male teacher is maestro. Also, you can use the word professor. For female teachers, it is maestra and profesora.
Estudiantes is a Spanish word that means students.
For a female student, you could use alumna. Otherwise, the term estudiante works for both male and female.
Profesór is the spanish word for male professor. Profesora is a female professor. Maestro/Maestra for teacher male/female. "Tengo un profesór" means I have a [male] professor. "Tenemos un profesór" means we have a [male] professor. The spanish word for male is masculino. "Tengo un profesór masculino" would be a redundant statement that repeats itself redundantly over again.
Tepig can be both male and female
It depends.There's "male" and "female" in some algaes, where a female genome, and a male genome come together to form the zygote.But they dont have male and female the way humans think of male and female.
Male: Onderwyser Female: Onderwyseres
Casado/a (male/female).
it is called fertilization and the female and male gametes form a zygote. (: