Hot is an adjective and therefore neither masculine nor feminine. The gender will be taken from the noun to which the adjective refers.
The French word for hot is "chaud." In French, it is masculine.
hot = chaud hot (a hot girl, for example) = sexy
"Weinie" in French is translated as "saucisse" or "hot-dog."
In French, "hot" is pronounced as "chaud." It is phonetically pronounced as "sho."
"il fait chaud" in French means "it's hot."
No, the word 'hot' in the compound noun 'hot dog' is functioning as an adjective, a dog that is served hot. The compound noun 'hot dog' is a complex noun, a compound noun formed when a noun is put together with another part of speech.
masculine
Calda in the feminine and caldo in the masculine for temperature and figa in the feminine and figo in the masculine for appearance are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "hot." The respective pronunciations of the two sets of feminine and masculine singular adjectives in Italian will be "KAL-da" and "KAL-do" for "hot" temperatures and weather and "FEE-ga" and "FEE-go" for "hot" looks.
Calda in terms of a feminine object and caldo for a masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "hot".Specifically, the Italian word is the singular form of an adjective. It means "hot, warm" in terms of the weather. The pronunciation will be "KAHL-dah" in terms of a feminine-gender object and "KAHL-doh" in terms of a masculine.
the noun 'air' is masculine in French l'air est sec et chaud (the air is dry and hot) = the adjectives are also put in the masculine form.
"Super-flight" is an English equivalent of the Italian word volissimo. The masculine singular noun represents the combination of the masculine singular noun volo ("flight") and the superlative ending -issimo ("extremely," "most," "super," "ultra"). The pronunciation will be "vo-LEES-see-mo" in Italian.
The singular froid et chaud and the plural froids et chauds in the masculine and the singular froide et chaude and the plural froides et chaudes in the feminine are French equivalents of the English phrase "cold and hot." Context makes clear whether one (cases 1, 3) or more (examples 2, 4) of a female (instances 1, 2), male (options 3, 4) or mixed female and male (sample 4) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "fwa ey sho" in the masculine and "fwa-de shod" in the feminine in French.
Mercredi il fait chaud is a French equivalent of the English phrase "Wednesday is hot."Specifically, the masculine noun mercredi means "Wednesday." The masculine pronoun ilmeans "he, it." The verb fait means "(he/she/it) does/makes, does do/make, is doing/making." The masculine adjective/adverb chaudmeans "hot."The pronunciation will be "mehr-kuh-dee eel feh shoh" in French.
Sì, sei bona! in the feminine and Sì, sei bono! in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Aye, you're hot!" Context makes clear which form suits. The respective pronunciations will be "see sey BO-na" in the feminine and "see sey BO-no" in the masculine in Italian.
Questa è figa! in the feminine and Questo è figo!in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "That's hot!" Context makes clear which form suits. The respective pronunciations will be "KWEY-sto eh FEE-ga" in the feminine and "KWEY-sto eh FEE-go" in the masculine in Italian.
chauds
hot = chaud hot (a hot girl, for example) = sexy
Hottie does not translate into French, chaudes is French for hot, however.