Frances , francesca
Feminine of Francis- like our Frances. The French also use Francine.
The name Francine is derived from the male name "Francis," which means "Frenchman" or "free man" in French. Francine is often used as a feminine form of Francis.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The name 'Frances' is usually the name of a female.The corresponding name for a male is 'Francis'.The most common spelling for a surname is 'Francis'.Note: This is only a convention since the names originate from languages that do have masculine and feminine nouns (for example Francesca and Francisco). It's the option of the parents naming a child to be conventional or not.
"Francis" His full name was "Robert Francis Kennedy". He had not been given a middle name at birth, "Francis" was his confirmation name (a name taken during the Roman Catholic rite of Confirmation). His middle name is often presumed to be "Fitzgerald", that of his brother John (whose middle name was actually his mother's family name), and sometimes mistakenly given as "Frances" (the feminine form of "Francis").
The name of the lady bug is Francis, who happens to be a male lady bug. :P
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.
feminine, i believe
Françoise is a French equivalent of the English name "Frances." The feminine proper name represents a feminine equivalent of François ("Francis"), whose original meaning relates to being a member of the peoples known as Franks and as throwers of the axe called a francisca in their honor. The pronunciation will be "fraw-swaz" in French.
Feminine
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
the feminine of he is she