In French, as in most languages spoken today, all nouns have a grammatical gender. French has only two--masculine and feminine. People nouns take the gender you would expect; frère (brother) is masculine and sœur (sister) is feminine, for example. But most nouns are just one gender or the other for no particular reason; chaise (chair) is feminine but bureau (desk) is masculine, for example.
The gender of a noun affects all adjectives (including articles like "the") and pronouns that refer to that noun in a sentence. For example:
I'm eating a grapefruit. It's delicious. -- Je mange un pamplemousse. Il est délicieux.
I'm eating a pear. It's delicious. -- Je mange une poire. Elle est délicieuse.
In French, "grapefruit" is masculine and "pear" is feminine. Therefore the translations for a, it, and delicious are all different. Since those words refer to the fruit, they have to agree with it in gender.
So you can see that all French adjectives and pronouns have two forms--a masculine form and a feminine form. You might say, "The feminine of délicieux is délicieuse." I hope that answers your question!
The feminine form of a word typically refers to a grammatical gender category used to denote female nouns, pronouns, and adjectives in certain languages like Spanish or French. In English, gender distinctions are less common, but some nouns have specific feminine forms (e.g. actor/actress, lion/lioness).
The word "gratitud" in Spanish is considered feminine.
In French, the word "émission" is feminine.
The French word "sorte" is feminine.
The word 'comedie' in French is feminine.
The French word "aide" is feminine.
The word "gratitud" in Spanish is considered feminine.
Vivera is a derivitave of the word vivero, which is of Portugese descent. When it is translated into English, it means to live. Vivera is the feminine version of the word.
Objects are not feminine or masculine, specific words are. If there's more than one word for the same object, they don't necessarily have to have the same gender. So you'd need to specify which particular word you meant. The ones I know of (voiture and automobile) are feminine, but there could be a masculine one I'm unaware of.
it's feminine - uneRuler in french is a feminine word
The French word for Africa, "Afrique," is feminine.
talitha meens three I don't think that "talitha" is an actual word in Arabic. However, if you meant the word "thalitha", it means: third (in feminine form).
The French word "la" is a feminine article used before feminine nouns.
feminine, i believe
feminine
The French word "sorte" is feminine.
In French, the word "série" is feminine.
duck or dutch- if you meant drake-