Masculine
feminine
English does not have feminine or masculine nouns. In Spanish, it is feminine.
The feminine form of alumnus is alumna. The feminine plural is alumnae.
The feminine form of a baron is a baroness.
Masculine
Lady.
Landlord. Gender-specific titles are on the way out.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender specific noun for a male of high rank is lord.The corresponding gender specific noun for a female is lady.Instead of "my Lord", people would refer to a woman as "my Lady".
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun knight is a word for a warrior of olden times who fought on horseback to serve a king. There is no corresponding noun for a female.The noun for a male of high rank is lord. The corresponding noun for a female is lady.
The feminine proper given name 'Martha' derives from the Aramaic 'Maretha', literally meaning 'lady, mistress', which is the feminine variant of 'mar, mara', literally meaning 'lord, master'.
"The Lord is my strength" is an English equivalent of the Italian Il Signore è la mia forza.Specifically, the masculine definite article il means "the." The masculine noun Signore means "Lord." The verb è means "is." The feminine definite article la means "the." The feminine possessive adjective mia means "my." The feminine noun forza means "strength."The pronunciation is "eel see-NYOH-reh lah MEE-ah FOHR-tsah."
feminine
feminine, i believe
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
Feminine
feminine