In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Examples of gender specific nouns for male and female are:
calmer is a verb (to calm, to calm down); it has no masculine nor feminine in French.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are:boar/sowboy/girlbrother/sisterbuck/doebull/cowcock/hencount/countessfather/mothergentleman/ladygroom/bridehusband/wifeking/queenlord/ladyman/womannephew/niecepeacock/peahenrooster/henstallion/mareuncle/auntwidower/widow
Bas in French is masculine as a noun for "bottom" or "stocking" or as an adjective for "low" even though it has no gender as an adverb for "down" or "downstairs."
Well, darling, in French, the word "notebook" is masculine. So, if you want to refer to a notebook in French, you would say "un cahier" which means "a notebook" in English. Just remember, whether it's masculine or feminine, a notebook is always there to jot down your thoughts and dreams, regardless of its gender.
No.
Drop Down list is the select option in which there are multiple options on drop down. It can be done by <select> tag in HTML.
examples of plants with modified roots.....
It depends whether you're using it alone or not. "Un contre" literally means "a counter" (like when a player charges down a kick in Rugby, for instance), and in this case it is masculine. If part of a two-piece word, such as "un contre-argument" or "une contre-offensive", it assumes the gender of the word it is linked to ("argument" and "offensive" in my examples, which are masculine and feminine respectively). It can also mean "against", though (for instance "je suis contre le racisme"), and in this case gender won't matter to you because it won't affect how the word is spelled or used.
force -lifting object
The Romans did not "invent" masculine and feminine language. Several other languages which were spoken before or during the same time period as Latin also used masculine, feminine, and neuter nouns/adjective (e.g. Ancient Greek, which predates Latin). Besides all that, languages are rarely, if ever, "invented"; they develop organically from the way they are spoken. In other words, the Romans never sat down and consciously decided to use gendered nouns/adjectives; it just sort of happened (probably because Indo-European, an ancestor language of Latin, Greek, and many other languages, likely used gendered nouns/adjectives as well).
drop down list. i guess
point up pentagram = masculine, energy going out point down pentagram = feminine, energy going in. Christianity makes everyone scared of everything. Neither one of them is "evil." They are just 2 sides of the same whole.