In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The gender specific noun for a male is count.
The corresponding gender specific noun for a female is countess.
Count is a masculine word. A count is a nobleman equivalent in rank to an English earl. Countess is a feminine word
Countess is the feminine term
The feminine gender of "votary" is "votress."
The feminine gender for the word "heir" is "heiress."
Countess---Masculine: CountFeminine: Countess
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.
CountessThe feminine version of "count" is "countess". Rather than "Count [last name]", it is "Countess [last name]".
feminine is aviatrix
waitress is the feminine
There is no feminine gender of the word "cub." Cub is neutral in English, so it is used for male and female cubs.