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Vin is a masculine noun in French: le vin.
Vin is wine in French and masculine is male in French, however it is also an English word. Feminine is an English word as well.
Wine is masculine you would say "du vin" for "some wine".
"Très bon vin rouge" is a French equivalent of "Very good French wine."Specifically, the adverb "très" means "very." The masculine adjective "bon" means "good." The masculine noun "vin" means "wine." The masculine/feminine adjective "rouge" means "red."The pronunciation is "treh boh veh roozh."
vin rouge
"Vin" is a French equivalent of "wine."The French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "veh" (the N is practically silent).e.g. a bottle of red wine - une bouteille de vin rouge
"Wine" is an English equivalent of "vin."The French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "veh."
Un très mauvais vin rouge
Unbelievable. Red. I mean - seriously?..
Une bouteille de vin rouge
In French, nouns are assigned gender (masculine or feminine) regardless of the actual gender of the object. This grammatical gender system comes from Latin, the language from which French originated. There is no specific reason why certain words are masculine or feminine; it is simply a part of the linguistic structure of the French language.
Literally fine wine is vin fin A really good ( and really expensive ) wine may be referred to as a millesime.