No, it is not. Gender is a noun (male-female classification).
Gender: a subclass within a grammatical class (as noun, pronoun, adjective, or verb) of a language that is partly arbitrary but also partly based on distinguishable characteristics (as shape, social rank, manner of existence, or sex) and that determines agreement with and selection of other words or grammatical forms
'Would everyone please bring their computers to the writing shop.'The antecedent is the indefinite pronoun 'everyone', a word that takes the place of an unknown or unnamed number and gender of people; the pronoun 'their' (a possessive adjective) represents any number and gender of people.That is the agreement, an unknown number and gender.
The antonym of the noun 'gender' is genderlessness, a word for the state of having no gender.
The person and number do not indicate gender, the noun antecedent determines gender. For example:When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. (the noun George indicates use of the male personal pronoun)Aunt Mary made her lemon cake for the party. (the noun Aunt Mary indicates use of the female adjective pronoun)The house needs a lot of work, it has a bad roof. (the noun house indicates use of the neuter personal pronoun)
Cautious IS an adjective. An adjective is an action!
Yes, it is. It can be both a noun or an adjective, referring to the gender of a living thing.
The related adjective "girly" might be appropriate, but has a connotation of frilliness.To simply define gender, you can use the adjective female.
The related adjective "girly" might be appropriate, but has a connotation of frilliness.To simply define gender, you can use the adjective female.
"hydro" is not a noun, it is a prefix, usually to a noun or adjective and does not affect gender. If it is a prefix to a noun, the new noun formed will have the same gender as the original noun. If it is a prefix to an adjective, the noun the adjective refers to will provide the gender. "Hydroélectricité" for example is feminine, because "électricité" is feminine.
"Spotted" can be a verb which has no gender. "Spotted" can also be an adjective, in which case it will follow the gender of the noun to which it relates.
No. Heroine is a noun, a person (the female gender of hero). The same word, heroic, is used as an adjective for heroine or hero.
No. "It" is a pronoun, representing a noun whose gender is irrelevant or nonexistent.
The adjective and noun agreement rule in Latin requires that a noun and any adjective that modifies must agree in gender, number, and case (but not necessarily ending).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female. The word 'unique' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The adjective 'unique' is a neuter word, it has no gender.
Éste (as a pronoun) ésta (as a pronoun) este (as a demonstrative adjective) esta (demonstrative adjective) esto (demonstrative pronoun, neuter gender)
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The word 'intelligent' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'intelligent' is intelligence, a neuter noun, a word for something that has no gender.
Yes, it is a possessive adjective (his shoe), and also a possessive pronoun (the shoe is his). It is the possessive or genitive case of the singular third-person pronoun used for masculine gender. It is used as a possessive adjective.