There is none.
You are an American. (Doesn't matter if you are a girl or guy)
you are Dutch.
You are German.
you are French.
If you are saying that you are from a certain country (in English) then there is no difference in masculine or feminine.
Dutch is the same way.
But if you are speaking German then there is a difference. (Amerikaner/Amerikanerin)
The feminine gender of "Dutch" is "Dutchess."
'male' is in Dutch 'mannelijk'. 'Female' or 'feminine' is in Dutch 'vrouwelijk'.
duck or dutch- if you meant drake-
The masculine 'vriend' and the feminine 'vriendin'are Dutch equivalents of 'friend'.
"Dutch boy" = "Nederlandse jongen"- Dutch = Nederlands (with neutral words)/ Nederlandse(with feminine and masculine words).- Boy = jongen.
Carine is a French equivalent of the Dutch name Karina. The pronunciation of the French feminine proper noun -- whose origins trace back to the feminine form of the Latin adjective carus ("dear") -- will be "ka-reen" in French.
Selma is a variant of Zelma which is a short form of Anzelma which is the feminine form of the Dutch-German name Anselm meaning 'Helmet'.
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.
feminine, i believe
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
Feminine