Want this question answered?
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.Foods have no gender. Words for foods are neuter nouns.
In French, the word "apple" (pomme) is feminine. "La pomme" is used to refer to an apple in general.
It's feminine, so you say une pomme or la pomme.
"Én" (masculine) or "ett" (neuter), which are the words describing the amount of one that are different from "en" and "et", the masculine and neuter forms of a or an. The feminine indefinite article is "ei".Examples:A girl with an apple and one euro - En/ei jente (can be m. or f.) med et eple og én euroThe number one minus one is zero - Tallet (n.) ett minus én er null
Feminine is the gender of the French phrase pommes de terre. The pronunciation of the feminine plural noun followed by a possessive preposition and a feminine singular noun -- which translate literally as "apple of (the) earth" and loosely as "potatoes" -- will be "puhm duh tehr" in French.
Apple in German is Apfel.The plural is Äpfel.
The German word for apple is Apfel.
•Maçã (mah-suh) "The apple" = "A maçã" [feminine noun]
See image link below. See differences at applesnail.net -> anatomy -> reproductive system section. Some few species of snails are bisexual, being both masculine and feminine.
"Puhm duh sawng" is the pronunciation of the French phrase pomme de sang.Specifically, the feminine noun pomme means "apple." The preposition de means "of." The masculine noun sangmeans "blood."
Apfel
Apple slices can be translated as Apfelscheiben or Apfelstücke.