Chicken is "poulet" in French, which is a masculine noun.
Feminine
It depends entirely on the language and, in a number of languages, the gender changes whether we are referring to a living chicken or "food-item" chicken, since those can be distinct words.
Gender in nouns refers to a grammatical classification of nouns based on their category, typically masculine, feminine, or neuter. In some languages, the gender of a noun can affect the form of associated words, such as articles or adjectives, that agree with it in a sentence. It is a linguistic feature found in many languages, but not all languages have gendered nouns.
'Chicken soup' is an English equivalent of 'la sopa de polla'* and 'la sopa de pollo'*.The feminine noun 'sopa' means 'soup. Its singular definite article is 'la' ['the'], and its singular indefinite article 'una' ['a, one']. The preposition 'de' means 'of, from'. The feminine noun 'polla'means '[female] chicken' or 'hen'. The masculine noun 'pollo' means '[male] chicken' or 'rooster'. Its singular definite article is 'el', and its singular indefinite article 'un'.All together, they're pronounced 'lah SOH-pah theh POH-yah [or POH-yoh]'.*There are slang uses of these words that you may not be comfortable with. So please be careful of your usage of the two words.
The English language does not use feminine or masculine forms. English uses gender specific nouns and pronouns.The second person (the person spoken to) pluralpronoun is you.The pronoun 'you' functions as both a subject and an object in a sentence.The pronoun 'you' takes the place of a plural noun (or two or more nouns) for females, males, or a mixed group.Examples:Jack and Jim, you need to wash up for lunch.Jane and Jill, you need to wash up for lunch.Jack and Jill, you need to wash up for lunch.Children, you need to wash up for lunch.I made some chicken soup for you.
In Mexican Spanish, "chicken" is pronounced as "po-yo." The "ch" is pronounced like the English "ch" in "chicken" and the "i" is pronounced as a short "ee" sound.
Gallina bianca in the feminine and pollo bianco -- for the animal and the white sauced-served meal item -- in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "white chicken."Specifically, the feminine noun gallina and the masculine pollo respectively mean "female chicken" and "male chicken" (or chicken in general). The feminine adjective bianca and the masculine bianco translate as "white."The pronunciation will be "gal-LEE-na BYAN-ka" in the feminine and "POL-lo BYAN-ko" in the masculine.
peacock
It is masculine. (un poulet)
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The noun chicken is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.The gender specific noun for a male is cock or rooster.The gender specific noun for a female is hen.
Pollo (alla) parmigiana is the Italian equivalent of the phrase "Chicken parmigian" in English.Specifically, the masculine noun pollo can be translated as "chicken" in English. The word alla combines the preposition a with the feminine singular definite article la to mean "in the" in English. The feminine adjective/noun/pronoun parmigiana means "of Parma, Parma-style, relating to Parma" in English.The pronunciation will be "POHL-loh AHL-lah PAHR-me-DJYAH-nah" in Italian.
It depends entirely on the language and, in a number of languages, the gender changes whether we are referring to a living chicken or "food-item" chicken, since those can be distinct words.
Gender in nouns refers to a grammatical classification of nouns based on their category, typically masculine, feminine, or neuter. In some languages, the gender of a noun can affect the form of associated words, such as articles or adjectives, that agree with it in a sentence. It is a linguistic feature found in many languages, but not all languages have gendered nouns.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun 'cockerel' is a gender specific noun for a young male chicken. The noun 'pullet' is a gender specific noun for a young female chicken.
"Chicken" in English means pollo in Italian.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'rooster' is a gender specific noun for a male chicken.The gender specific nouns for a female chicken are pullet or hen.The noun 'chicken' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
"Mouthfuls of chicken and sausage (marinated) in (aromatic) balsam (vinegar)" is an English equivalent of Bocconcini di pollo al balsamico con luganega. The masculine plural noun, preposition, masculine singular noun, preposition with masculine singular definite article, masculine singular noun, preposition, and feminine singular noun translate literally into English as "delicacies (tidbits) of chicken at aromatic (balsamic) vinegar with sausage." The pronunciation will be "BOK-kon-TCHEE-nee dee POL-lo al bal-SA-mee-ko kon LOO-ga-NEY-ga" in Italian.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender noun for a female chicken is hen.The gender noun for a male chicken is rooster.The common gender noun, a word for a male or a female, is chicken.