Marrant is masculine. The feminine version is 'marrante'.
Mustard is "la moutarde", a feminine noun in French.
maintenant isn't a noun, it's an adverb
It's feminine :)
la menthe is a feminine noun in French.
funny
There are four ways to say 'red' in Spanish; feminine singular, feminine plural, masculine singular, masculine plural, examples of which follow.Red ant = hormiga roja (f.s.)red ants = hormigas rojas (f.p.)red dog = perro rojo (m.s.)red dogs = perros rojos (m.p)ALL the words in bold type mean 'red.'
ant = hormiga (or-MI-gah)
a nurse is "un infirmier" (masc.) or "une infirmière" (fem.)People looking for temporary positions are called "remplaçant" (masc.) or "remplaçante" (fem.)Traveling nurses (those in the profession who take on positions for short-term assignments) are called in French "un infirmier remplaçant / une infirmière remplaçante".
It comes from the Latin name meaning "admiring"
Their lost hats!
There is no masculine for "une fourmi" (an ant in French).
Ant is "fourmi" in French. This is a feminine noun, despite having no final "e".
The Latin feminine noun meaning an ant is formica
Fourmi. (like formic acid) La fourmi (feminine noun, singular), les fourmis (plural)
There are four ways to say 'red' in Spanish; feminine singular, feminine plural, masculine singular, masculine plural, examples of which follow.Red ant = hormiga roja (f.s.)red ants = hormigas rojas (f.p.)red dog = perro rojo (m.s.)red dogs = perros rojos (m.p)ALL the words in bold type mean 'red.'
The Hindi word for ant is "ΰ€ΰ₯ΰ€ΰ€ΰ₯" (chinti).
Je T'aime Anthony. ^ I love you ant/anthony
"Pismire" is an archaic word for ant. It comes from the Middle English word "pismire," which originated from the Old English words "pise" (ant) and "mΔre" (ant).
Some examples of unusual masculine words could be "ballerina" or "nanny", while unusual feminine words could include "blacksmith" or "firefighter". These words challenge traditional gender stereotypes by associating masculine traits with typically feminine roles and vice versa.
une fourmi (fem.) is an ant in French.
In French "anteater" could be "fourmilier" or "tamanoir".
The singular possessive for the noun ant is ant's.