It's MA'AM but im not sure what letters you capitilize
Hen
The feminine counterpart of "patron" is "patroness."
feminine term of villain
The feminine version of heir is heiress.
Petite is the feminine form of the adjective 'small'. Its masculine counterpart is petit.
Ms
The female equivalent of Sir is Dame
The feminine form is materteral, referring to an aunt. Avuncular refers to an uncle, that which is like an uncle.
As the goddess of the wilderness and nature I guess you would say Pan was her male counterpart, but magic was quite a feminine thing and while other gods had some areas of magic (i.e. Apollo with oracles and healing) there was no true counterpart for that.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.Madam (abbreviated Mdm.) is a title used only in formal situations to address a female (MadamAmbassador, Madam Chairperson, etc.)Sir is an appropriate counterpart to address a male in formal situations.Mister (abbreviated Mr.) is the title for a male in less formal situations.
Handsome, attractive. Guapa is the feminine counterpart - pretty, attractive.
tsarina and if you bothered to look it up on wiki answers then you would have realised that someone has already answered this question!!