The French word acteur is masculine in gender. The masculine singular noun, whose feminine equivalent is actrice, means "actor" in English. The pronunciation will be "ak-tuhr" in the masculine and "ak-treess" in the feminine in French.
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mer) In Spanish it is masculine (el mar) In Welsh it is masculine (y mor)
"Strict" in the masculine and "stricte" in the feminine are French equivalents of the English word "strict."Specifically, the French word is an English loan word. Depending upon the context, other options are the feminine/masculine adjective "sévère" along with the masculine "rigoureux" and the feminine "rigoureuse."The pronunciation is "streekt."
The word escargot, the French word for "snails" is masculine. However, as it begins with a vowel, it would be written as l'escargot.
lol neither. only those..romance languages have nouns with genders. It's just a smart word. ============= In French, it's a feminine word : la télévision, une télévision.
Quel, quels, quelle, quelles, are the different versions (masculine singular, masculine plural, feminine singular, feminine plural) of the English word 'what'.
Infirmier is a masculine word. The feminine is infirmière.
feminine
it's a masculine word.
the word certificat is " masculine " in french
The word 'impermeable' in French is masculine.
The french word for Parie is masculine.
Douce is feminine. The masculine is 'doux'.
La salade is feminine
un disque
The French word for Africa, "Afrique," is feminine.
"Gentil" is a masculine adjective in French. The feminine is "gentille".
It is a french word and it is Masculine