The English language does not use gender words; all nouns are neuter and take neuter verbs. English uses different words for a male or a female person or animal, such as mother and father.
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The word 'film' is a neutral noun.
I assume you are refering to the gender of the article. In a combined word the gender of the last word dominates. Die Fantasie.(feminin) Der Film.(masculine) Der Fantasie-Film. (Therefor masculine.)
Nauta (Genitive Nautae) is a masculine word in the first declension. When using adjectives, make sure to use the masculine gender even though this word "looks" feminine.
masculine un film (singular) - des films (plural) J'ai été voir un bon film hier au cinéma. J'ai vu de bons films dans ma vie.
je suis en colère is neither feminine nor masculine. It means 'I am angry'. The fact this is a boy - or a girl - speaking would not turn the phrase into masculine or feminine. Only nouns and the related adjectives have a gender in French, but not the sentences (even if there had been a noun in it)
La Finlande (feminine, singular name)
The Italian word cinema is masculine, not feminine, in gender.
It is masculine, so you would use the un or le in front of film. Example: I saw a movie. J'ai vu un film.
it's a masculine word.
The word "disques" is masculine in French.
penguin is a masculine word and it is un manchot. there is no feminine form of that word because it is masculine.
Douce is feminine. The masculine is 'doux'.
La salade is feminine
feminine
Masculine
It is masculine
Infirmier is a masculine word. The feminine is infirmière.
Infirmier is a masculine word. The feminine is infirmière.