The Spanish word "al" is masculine. It is a combination of the words "a" (to, at) + "el" (the, masc. sing.).
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mosquée). In Spanish it is also feminine (la mezquita). In Arabic it is masculine (al-jaame3a or al-masjed / الجامع المسجد).
Alta in the feminine and alto in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "high." The respective pronunciations of the singular adjectives will be "AL-ta" in the feminine and "AL-to" in the masculine.
The singular alta and the plural alte in the feminine and the singular alto and the plural alti in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "tall." The adjectives in question can be feminine or masculine in gender and singular or plural in number depending upon whether the description applies to a female, a male, or more than one of either or both. The respective pronunciations will be "AL-ta" and "AL-tey" in the feminine and "AL-to" and "AL-tee" in the masculine in Italian.
The singular allergica and the plural allergichein the feminine and the singular allergico and the plural allergici in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "allergic." The choice depends upon the gender and number of the listening audience. The respective pronunciations will be "al-LER-djee-ka" and "al-LER-djee-key" in the feminine and "al-LER-djee-ko" and "al-LER-djee-tchee" in the masculine in Italian.
Al Marrewa has written: 'The feminine warrior' -- subject(s): Women, Prevention, Self-defense for women, Rape, Attitudes, Psychology, Crimes against
Questa torta al formaggio è deliziosa is an Italian equivalent of 'This cheesecake is delicious'. The words in Italian are pronounced 'KWEH-stah TOHR-tah eh deh-lee-TSYOH-sah'.In the word by word translation, the feminine demonstrative 'questa' means 'this'. The feminine gender noun 'torta' means 'cake'. The word 'al' combines the preposition 'a' and the masculine definite article 'il' to form 'al' ['to the']. The masculine gender noun 'formaggio' means 'cheese'. The verb 'è' means '[he/she/it] is'. The feminine adjective 'deliziosa' means 'delicious'.
América, el nombre del continente americano o nombre de mujer. En honor al viajero y navegante Américo Vespucio.If you mean to ask "why" is America feminine in Spanish, the answer is that it is wholly incidental. A word being masculine or feminine does not impart a value judgment on that thing.
The singular alzata and the plural alzate in the feminine and the singular alzato and the plural alzati in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "was up." Context makes clear whether it is a question of one (cases 1, 3) or more (examples 2, 4) of a female (examples 1, 2), male (options 3, 4) or mixed female and male (sample $) audience.The respective pronunciations will be "al-TSA-ta" or "al-TSA-tey" in the feminine and "al-TSA-to" or "al-TSA-tee" in the masculine in Italian.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. Nouns that can be either a male or a female, such as parent, are common gender nouns; nouns for things that have no gender are neuter. If you are writing poetically, it is a matter of choice. Normally, it is treated as neuter.
'ir al....' OR 'ir a la....' (depending on the Spanish gender of whatever 'the...' is) For example: ir al teatro (to go to the theatre) because 'teatro' is masculine ir a la corrida (to go to the bullfight) because 'corrida' is feminine
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.