In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'page' as a word for a person employed to deliver messages or perform personal services is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female employee.
The noun 'page' as a word for one or both sides of a sheet of paper in a book, magazine, newspaper, etc. is a neuter noun, a word for something that has no gender.
The concept of a page does not have a gender in English. It is an inanimate object and does not require gender assignment.
Alexandra tells Atticus that Scout needs a feminine influence in her life on page 108 of "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
it depends if your talking about nouns or verbs and the only noun i cant think of right now is page and plage (the same as english) and there is no such thing as a female verb because the action is male
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.
feminine, i believe
Feminine
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
the feminine of he is she
Yes, la is feminine for the.
It is feminine because Mary in french (marie) is feminine so it's a females name.
Countess is the feminine term