feminine or masculin
English does not have masculine or feminine genders for words.
Orsa in the feminine and orso in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "bear." The pronunciation for the feminine singular form is "OR-sa." It will be "OR-so" for the masculine singular form.It's ORSO.
Feminine
a male bear is 'un ours' (masculine noun). The female bear is 'une ourse' (fem.)
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The gender specific noun for a female bear is sow.
Orsetta in the feminine and orsetto in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "bear cub." Context makes clear which option suits. The respective pronunciations will be "or-SET-ta" in the feminine and "or-SET-to" in the masculine in Italian.
its masculine no doubt
Masculine
masculine
feminine
Feminine.
Un'orsetta and un'orsina in the feminine and un orsetto and un orsino in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "little bear."Specifically, the feminine singular definite article una* and the masculine un are "a, an." The feminine noun orsa and the masculine orso respectively mean "female bear" and "male bear." The feminine endings -etta and -ina and the masculine -etto and -ino translate as "dear, little, small, sweet." The respective pronunciations will be "OO-nor-SET-ta" and "OO-nor-SEE-na" in the feminine and "OO-nor-SET-to" and "OO-nor-SEE-no" in the masculine.*The final vowel drops - and is replaced by an apostrophe - before a noun whose spelling begins with a vowel.