Nationale (feminine), national (masculine). The difference is in the final "e"
The feminine form of the French adjective "national" is "nationale".
"Riche" in French is a masculine adjective. The feminine form of "riche" is "riche" when used as an adjective.
The feminine form of "Spain" in French is "Espagne."
"Intelligent" is a masculine adjective in French. The feminine form is "intelligente." The gender of the adjective changes depending on the noun it is describing.
The masculine form of the French word "gris" is "gris." It remains the same in both masculine and feminine forms.
The masculine form of "mince" in French is "mince" as well. Both the masculine and feminine forms of the adjective "mince" remain the same.
originale
The feminine form of "Spain" in French is "Espagne."
Petite is the feminine form of the adjective 'small'. Its masculine counterpart is petit.
The masculine form of the French word "gris" is "gris." It remains the same in both masculine and feminine forms.
beau (plural 'beaux') is the masculine adjective meaning beautiful in French. The feminine form is 'belle'
The singular demonstrative adjective, cette (paired with a feminine object or person) is the feminine form of the French equivalent of the English word, this or that. The masculine form is ce or cet.In French, the demonstrative adjective has to agree, in number and gender, with the noun that it modifies.
The masculine form of the French adjective "original" is "original." French adjectives do not have separate masculine and feminine forms; they remain the same regardless of the gender of the noun they describe.
Yes, "gros" is considered an irregular French adjective because it does not follow the typical pattern for adjective endings. It does not change form for feminine or plural nouns, unlike regular French adjectives.
Francophone is the name that is given to French-speaking countries. The word in question serves as a feminine/masculine singular adjective/noun in the above-mentioned form and as a feminine/masculine plural adjective/noun in the form francophones. The pronunciation for both forms will be "fran-ko-fun" in French.
"English" is "anglais" (the language, uncapitalized), "Anglais" (the inhabitants of England), or "anglais" (the adjective) or "anglaise" (feminine form for the adjective).
"That" is an English equivalent of the French word quel.Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an indefinite adjective. The feminine singular form is quelle. The pronunciation will be "kehl" in French.
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.