That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French, it is masculine (le requin). In Spanish, it is masculine (el tiburón). In Arabic, it is masculine (سمك القرش). In German, it is feminine (das haie).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun for a male dog is dog; nouns for a male dog used for breeding are stud or sire. The noun for a female dog is bitch. The noun dog is also a common gender noun, a word used for a male or a female.
Le chien noir in French is "the black dog" in English.
masculine
feminine
it is masculine as in un chien but there is a feminine : une chienne, for the female dog
The common term is le chien. Technically, a female dog should be la chienne but the word has the same pejorative meaning as the English word for female dog (rhymes with "witch")
It is "le chien" in French. "Chien" is a masculine noun, so it takes the masculine article "le."
"Le" and "La" are used in French to indicate the gender of nouns. "Le" is used with masculine singular nouns and "La" is used with feminine singular nouns. For example, "Le chien" (the dog) uses "Le" because "chien" is masculine, while "La maison" (the house) uses "La" because "maison" is feminine.
No. The word 'chien' is French for a 'male dog'. It therefore is a masculine gender noun. The French equivalent of a female dog is 'chienne', which is a feminine gender noun.
It is masculine.
The article la is feminine; le is masculine.
In French, "le" is the masculine definite article and is used before masculine nouns. The feminine equivalent is "la."
Masculine : le temps
It's masculine. Beef in French is le boeuf.
Masculine: un cadeau / le cadeau
La maison is feminine but le bâtiment is masculine