the L' can be either masculine or feminine. It is used as a replacement for the feminine "la" or the masculine "le", when the following noun starts with a vowel sound; in short, it is used for the sake of pronounciation, like when you switch "a" for "an" in English. (you wouldn't say "a idiot" or "an car")
The trouble is that "la" and "le" can help you distinguish between a feminine or a masculine French noun in French. Don't worry, you can still guess, by changing the definite article (the) for the undefinite article (which would be "a" or "an" in English).
Ex: L'avion > un avion > masculine.
L'ile > une ile > feminine.
In French, "la" is the feminine form and "le" is the masculine form. "L'" is a gender-neutral form used with words that start with a vowel sound, regardless of their gender.
masculine
La salade is feminine
Douce is feminine. The masculine is 'doux'.
The word "disques" is masculine in French.
feminine
It is feminine as the word is Des Ciseaux, which means it's feminine. :)
Feminine
masculine
its feminine " la" if feminine and "le" is masculine and "l" is a vowel like "l ecole
feminine
masculine
Feminine
balle is feminine in french / ballon is masculine
In French the country Mali is masculine.
It's masculine. Beef in French is le boeuf.
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
feminine