Vin.
The French word "vin" translates to "wine" in English.
Vinegar (vin aigre = sour wine)
Vin is wine in French and masculine is male in French, however it is also an English word. Feminine is an English word as well.
Le Vin means wine
The English word 'gourmet' comes to us (1820) from the French 'gourmet', altered from the Old French 'grommes' (plural), meaning "wine-tasters, wine merchant's servants" (of uncertain origin), then influenced by the Middle French 'gourmant' meaning "glutton".
The Luhya word for the English word 'wine' is "iwaini".
There isn't an English equivalent as this is a placename (in this case a wine-making area). It means the hillsides overlooking the River Rhône.
The English word wine comes directly from the Latin vinum (which also became vin in French).The word was already in Old English, at least as far back as the ninth century AD.Farther back, the word possibly comes from Primitive Indo-European.
Vin is a masculine noun in French: le vin.
It's the same word spelled the same in French. Not sure what you mean by "describe".
sour wine, or vinegar, is called 'du vinaigre' in French.
"Wine" is an English equivalent of "vin."The French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "veh."