In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.
The gender noun for a male is maharajah, a king or prince in India. The corresponding gender noun for a female is maharani, a female member of a maharajah's family.
Maharani
Mahalapye
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Maharani is a female of a royal family of old India.
A hind is the feminine of a hart!
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Aerin is the feminine. It means "the enlightened one"
Sinque
The feminine word for maharajah is maharani. A maharani is a queen or the wife of a maharajah in Indian royalty.
"Maha" is a prefix meaning "great" or "highest," and "rajah" means "king." In Hindi, "maharajah" is a masculine title for a king or prince. The feminine counterpart would be "maharani," with "rani" meaning "queen."
The noun maharajah is a male prince of India; the noun for a female is a maharani, usually the wife of a maharajah.
Maharani is a female of a royal family of old India.
The feminine gender of "votary" is "votress."
The feminine gender of "Dutch" is "Dutchess."
The feminine gender of "don" is "dona."
The feminine gender for "negro" in Spanish is "negra."
The feminine gender for the word "heir" is "heiress."
The feminine gender of tutor is "tutora" in Spanish.
There isn't one... the word 'enemy' has no gender.
Gender is genderless (in English) and as a reference to the sex of a person.