In English there are no masculine or feminine words. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male or female. All other parts of speech (verbs, adjective, adverbs, etc.) are neuter, words that have no gender.
Some popular masculine words are manly, beefcake, and macho.
English does not have masculine or feminine genders for words.
False. Feminine words end in "a" while masculine words end in an "o"
Banco is masculine as are most words that end in O
Roughly 60% of French words are masculine, while the remaining 40% are feminine.
Feminine, words ending with A tend to be Fem and words ending with O tend to be Mas.
No. It is plural for some and can be used for both masculine and feminine words.
An example of an acronym in Spanish using masculine words is "FBI" which stands for "Fuerzas de Seguridad" (Security Forces), where "fuerzas" and "seguridad" are both masculine nouns.
There is no definite answer to this question as it depends on how you count and categorize words. However, in Spanish, there are some noun endings that are typically masculine or feminine, but overall the language has a balance of masculine and feminine words.
This is an English word. English words are never masculine or feminine (except him, her, he, she, etc.).
A common acronym to remember which Spanish words are masculine is "LONERS": it stands for words that typically end in -l, -o, -n, -e, -r, and -s. For example, "libro" (book), "carro" (car), and "hombre" (man) are all masculine nouns. This acronym can help you identify many masculine nouns in the Spanish language.
le or Un