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)
Wall Street is neither feminine nor masculine. It's Neuter Gender.
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
Celer (masculine); celeris (feminine); celere (neuter).
"Hic, Haec," or "Hoc." Masculine, feminine, neuter.
Durus, if masculine; dura, if feminine; durum, if neuter.
Wild = Sævus if the subject is masculine, Sæva if Feminine and Sævum if neuter. all this for the singular for the plural: Sævi Sævæ Sæva, again masculine feminine neuter.