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In French, the word 'chicken' is masculine and is translated as 'poulet.'
The French equivalent of the English word "pork" is masculine, not feminine, in gender. The masculine singular noun porcmay be preceded by the masculine singular definite article le ("the"). The pronunciation will be "pohr" in French.
In English, there is no gender to "lobster" but the French term homard is a masculine noun.
The word français is masculine, not feminine, in gender in French. The masculine singular adjective/noun/pronoun translates into English as "French." The pronunciation will be "faw-seh" in French.
"Ce" is a demonstrative pronoun that is used for both masculine and feminine nouns in French. It is equivalent to "this" or "that" in English.
In French, the word 'chicken' is masculine and is translated as 'poulet.'
The word "sad" is feminine and masculine when translated from English to French. The most common translation will be triste in the feminine and masculine singular and tristes in the feminine and masculine plural. The pronunciation will remain "treest" in both the singular and plural.
The French equivalent of the English word "pork" is masculine, not feminine, in gender. The masculine singular noun porcmay be preceded by the masculine singular definite article le ("the"). The pronunciation will be "pohr" in French.
English words do not really have masculine or feminine - pays is a verb, present tense of to pay.
In English, there is no gender to "lobster" but the French term homard is a masculine noun.
The French word acteur is masculine in gender. The masculine singular noun, whose feminine equivalent is actrice, means "actor" in English. The pronunciation will be "ak-tuhr" in the masculine and "ak-treess" in the feminine in French.
The English article "a" is translated "un" (masculine) or "une" (feminine) in French.
Feminine
The word français is masculine, not feminine, in gender in French. The masculine singular adjective/noun/pronoun translates into English as "French." The pronunciation will be "faw-seh" in French.
la chair (English 'flesh') is a French feminine noun. la chaise (English 'chair') is also a French feminine noun.
masculine
Tout droit is a masculine, not a feminine, phrase in French. The adverb and masculine singular adjective translate into English as "straight ahead." The pronunciation will be "too dwa" in French.