masculine: un
feminine: une
The French have feminine and masculine words for African: africain (noun or adjective, masculine) and africaine (noun or adjective, feminine).
you put le or du in front of masculine words, and you put la or de la in front of feminine words
Most feminine words have e's at the end. All feminine words in french have the article: la, or une. Masculine words have: le, or un. The plural is: les.
Feminine.
Libyen in the masculine and libyennein the feminine are French equivalents of the English word "Libyan."Specifically, the French words are the feminine and masculine forms of an adjective or a noun. The noun may be preceded by the feminine definite article la ("the") and the masculine le or by the feminine indefinite article une("a, one") or the masculine un. The pronunciation is "leeb-yah" in the masculine and "leeb-yehn" in the feminine.
English does not have masculine or feminine genders for words.
The French have feminine and masculine words for African: africain (noun or adjective, masculine) and africaine (noun or adjective, feminine).
Feminine, words ending with A tend to be Fem and words ending with O tend to be Mas.
you put le or du in front of masculine words, and you put la or de la in front of feminine words
Bicyclette is feminine. In words ending in "ette" in French, are feminine.
This is an English word. English words are never masculine or feminine (except him, her, he, she, etc.).
Feminine
Most feminine words have e's at the end. All feminine words in french have the article: la, or une. Masculine words have: le, or un. The plural is: les.
Banco is masculine as are most words that end in O
une dent is a feminine noun in French.
Words ending '-ion' are always feminine.
No. It is plural for some and can be used for both masculine and feminine words.