In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female.
The noun 'water' is a neuter noun, a word for something that has no gender.
"Actriz" is a feminine noun. "Actor" is the masculine.
The French word for African is "Africain" when used for masculine and "Africaine" when used for feminine.
Butter is "beurre" in French, a masculine noun.
It is a masculine noun
Une personne (feminine noun)
masculine
un marqueur is a masculine noun as indicated by the masculine article 'un'. The feminine article 'une' will introduce a feminine noun, as 'une voiture'.
masculine
It depends on the noun that follows 'its': -son (if the noun is masculine, singular) -sa (if the noun is feminine, singular) -ses (if the noun is either masculine or feminine, plural)
Le poivre is a masculine noun.
Janvier is a masculine noun.
"Magasin" is a masculine noun in French.