The feminine word of teacher is "teachress" or "female teacher".
Yes, the word "profesora" is the feminine form of the word "profesor" in Spanish. It is used to refer to a female teacher or professor.
In French, the word "émission" is feminine.
The French word "sorte" is feminine.
The word 'comedie' in French is feminine.
The French word "aide" is feminine.
feminine. If I remember correctly, my Spanish teacher told us that if a noun ends in -men then it is feminine
teacher -_-
teacher -_-
ganan (×’× ×Ÿ) Note: the feminine form of this word, ganenet (×’× × ×ª) means "kindergarten teacher". I'm not aware of a feminine form that means "gardener"...maybe gananit (×’× × ×™×ª).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'preceptor' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female teacher or principal.
There isn't a gender word for teacher, as teacher is applicable to both male and female. Gender words are less used nowadays (waiter, waitress, steward, stewardess, host, hostess, etc.) are likely to be considered sexist.
it's feminine - uneRuler in french is a feminine word
The French word for Africa, "Afrique," is feminine.
The teacher. (feminine)
teacher (feminine)
There are multiple ways to say teacher in french. They most common is by saying professor. Masculine: Un Professeur Feminine: Une Prof Most non-proper nouns have a masculine and feminine in French and all adjectives have a masculine and feminine
feminine, i believe