In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
Examples of gender specific nouns for a male are:
father
brother
uncle
king
baron
sire
man
mister
stallion
steer
bull
tom
boar
buck
drake
In English, there are no masculine or feminine words. Gender is shown by gender specific nouns. Examples of male specific nouns are:actorboarboybridegroombrotherbuckbullcockcoltcountdadfathergandergentlemanhosthusbandkingmanmonkMr. (mister)peacockprincesonstallionunclewidower
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, for example man and woman or buck and doe.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms.English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.Examples gender specific nouns are:man, womanmother, fatheruncle, auntgirl, boyhusband, wifeboar, sowdoe, buckbull, cowhen, roosternanny goat, billy goatNouns for people or things that can be male or female are common gender nouns.Examples of common gender nouns are:personparentrelativechildspousebeardeerwhalechickengoatNouns for things that have no gender are neuter nouns.Examples of neuter nouns are:homeheartsidewalkshipeducationelevatoroceanopiniontesttractor
Stallion refers to a male horse, particularly one that is, or can be, used for breeding.In the English language it can be important to know the gender of an animal because some pronouns and other words are gender-specific. (He, him, his, himself; she, her, hers, herself)Example sentence:"That stallion is a fine horse. She He is 10 years old and has sired many potential champions."
In English, there are no masculine or feminine words. Gender is shown by gender specific nouns. Examples of male specific nouns are:actorboarboybridegroombrotherbuckbullcockcoltcountdadfathergandergentlemanhosthusbandkingmanmonkMr. (mister)peacockprincesonstallionunclewidower
Uno / un (this latter mentioning the masculine noun in singular)Una Unos (more like some in masculine gender, plural) Unas (more like some in feminine gender, plural)
In English (unlike French and some other languages) grammatical gender is almost always the same as natural gender. Masculine: man, boy, bull, stag. Feminine: woman, girl, cow, doe. Neuter: pencil, continent, elbow. On exception: ship can be used as feminine (The Santa Maria had her sails unfurled.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The gender specific noun for a male is host; the gender specific noun for a female is hostess.The noun 'host' may be used as a common gender noun. Language is a living thing, it evolves over time. Some gender specific nouns are becoming common gender nouns. Today, many actresses call themselves an actor; most writers call themselves an author, few still use the gender specific, authoress; the gender specific nouns aviator and aviatrix are now obsolete in favor of the common gender noun, pilot. But some will stay with us for a while yet, like mother and father.However, the term 'the host with the most' doesn't have as bright a ring as 'the hostess with the mostess'.
the examples of masculine are actor, benefactor, enchantor, conductor all the males are masculine
If you are asking if Japanese has grammatical gender, the answer is no. If you're asking if the English word "Japanese" is masculine and feminine, the answer is yes (since English also has no grammatical gender, except with some pronouns).
Some common gender nouns (synonyms) for the noun duke are:aristocratnobilityroyaltyblue blood
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female. Some examples of gender nouns for a female are:auntbridecowdaughterdoeduchessempressewefemalegirlgrandmotherhenhindhostessjennyladyleopardesslionessmadammarematronmissmistressmothermother-in-lawnannyniecenunpeahenpenprincessqueensistersowtigressvixenwaitresswidowwifewoman