A person, in French, une personne, is feminine.
According to the gender of the object or person is a guideline for when to use feminine or masculine designations.Specifically, English generally functions as a gender-less language in that either a neutral term or one form of feminine and masculine possibilities predominates. In gender-ful languages, femininity or masculinity may be obvious in terms of people. But it may not be obvious in terms of concepts, objects and things.
The French word "personnes" is feminine. In French, "personne" (singular) means "person" and is used in the feminine form, so its plural "personnes" retains that gender. Therefore, when referring to people, you would use feminine adjectives and articles with "personnes."
For one masculine person or object: Es non solus For one feminine person or object: Es non sola For multiple masculine people or objects: Estis non soli For multiple feminine people or objects: Estis non solae For multiple feminine and masculine things, use the multiple masculine one. For one neuter object: Es non solum For two or more: Estis non sola
laide*Laide is correct for one feminine noun/person. If it's masculine you would use laid. Feminine plural is laides, masculine plural is laids. Or, if you don't know whether your noun is masculine or feminine, you could always use moche which works for both (moches in the plural).
It depends on the subject. If you are talking to a girl, use "you" as feminine. If you are talking to a a male or both, you use the masculine
brain is masculine
Bello means beautiful. It is the masculine form of the word, so you would use it when speaking of a thing or person that is masculine. The feminine form is bella.
The gender of an adjective in Spanish is determined by the gender of the noun it describes. If the noun is feminine, the adjective should be in its feminine form. If the noun is masculine, the adjective should be in its masculine form.
Joli (masculine, singular), jolis (masculine, plural), jolie (feminine, singular) and jolies (feminine plural) mean pretty. Beau (masculine, singular), beaux (masculine, plural), belle (feminine, singular) and belles (feminine, plural) mean beautiful. If you want to use the masculine, singular word for beautiful but the word after beings with a vowel, you use bel instead.
The gender is feminine when "shoes" is translated from English to French since the equivalent is chaussures. Some French speakers still use the word souliers, which is masculine. The respective pronunciations will be "sho-syoor" in the feminine and "soo-lyey" in the masculine in French.
"Hibou" is a masculine word in French. So, it would use masculine determiners and adjectives when describing it.
In French, the word "flute" is feminine, so you would use the feminine article "la" with it.