In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female.
The noun day is a word that has no gender; the word day is a neuter noun.
feminine
Masculine
The word "Lied" in German is neuter.
it is das Ei (neuter)
In Hindi, the word "hind" doesn't have a concept of masculine or feminine as it is a neuter noun.
Wall Street is neither feminine nor masculine. It's Neuter Gender.
In German, the word for apple is "der Apfel," which is masculine. Therefore, it takes masculine articles and adjectives. In terms of grammatical gender, nouns in German can be masculine, feminine, or neuter, and "Apfel" falls into the masculine category.
Idem - masculine/neuter Eadem - feminine
femine gender
It depends on the subject. If you are talking to a girl, use "you" as feminine. If you are talking to a a male or both, you use the masculine
Durus, if masculine; dura, if feminine; durum, if neuter.
Celer (masculine); celeris (feminine); celere (neuter).