Neuter. "It" is a third person neuter pronoun, others being "he" and "she."
The third gender is commonly referred to as non-binary or genderqueer. Non-binary individuals may identify with a gender that does not fit within the traditional binary of male or female, or they may feel that their gender identity lies outside of these categories altogether. Gender identities can be diverse and vary from person to person.
Outra (feminine gender) Outro (masculine gender)
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female. In other languages, genders do exist, but the gender of a specific country depends on the given language.The names of countries are neuter nouns, words for a thing that has no gender.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. All other parts of speech (verb, adverbs, adjectives, preposition, etc.) have no gender specification at all.The word 'or' is a conjunction, a word that joins two or more statements, people, or things. Conjunctions do not have a gender specification.
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.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a female goose is goose.The noun for a male goose is gander.
The word elephant is neither masculine nor feminine. It is non-gender specific. Note that unlike many other languages, English does not assign have masculine, feminine, and neuter articles so nouns typically have no gender associate - with the obvious exception of nouns referring to gender like girl, boy, bull, cow, buck, doe, etc.
In English (unlike French and some other languages) grammatical gender is almost always the same as natural gender. Masculine: man, boy, bull, stag. Feminine: woman, girl, cow, doe. Neuter: pencil, continent, elbow. On exception: ship can be used as feminine (The Santa Maria had her sails unfurled.
In French, "cole" is feminine. The word "cole" means "school" in English. However, in general, gender in French is not determined by the meaning of the word, but rather by the noun's ending or other grammatical factors.
The plural of "him" (third person singular masculine) is "they" (third person plural) In English there is no differential between the feminine and masculine forms of third person plural. "They" is used for a group of males, group of females and a mixed group in English. Other languages, like French and Latin, have both masculine and feminine plurals, but luckily, in English, we only have the one form :)
In language, gender refers to the classification of nouns as masculine, feminine, or neuter. Different languages have different systems of gender classification, which may affect the way nouns are declined, conjugated, or associated with certain adjectives or pronouns based on their gender. This linguistic feature is often a grammatical rather than a biological distinction.
Connu (masculine), connue (feminine) Su (masculine), sue (feminine) Célèbre (famous) for both gender.