The word 'soldiers' is a mass-noun - without reference to either gender.
The word 'soldiers' is a mass-noun - without reference to either gender.
Soldiers is a noun; a plural, common noun. Collective nouns for soldiers include: A company of soldiers A boast of soldiers A division of soldiers A muster of soldiers A phalanx of soldiers A platoon of soldiers A troop of soldiers A squad of soldiers An army of soldiers A brigade of soldiers
The possessive form for the plural noun soldiers is soldiers'.Example: The soldiers' march took them across a river.
Soldiers
There isn't one... the word 'enemy' has no gender.
The word 'soldiers' is a mass-noun - without reference to either gender.
Catervae is the Latin equivalent of 'hordes'. It's a feminine gender noun. Its first, original use in Latin is in reference to a 'troop of barbarian soldiers or mercenaries'.
feminine
feminine, i believe
Feminine
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.
Catervae is the Latin equivalent of 'hordes'. It's a feminine gender noun. Its first, original use in Latin is in reference to a 'troop of barbarian soldiers or mercenaries'.
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.
feminine