In what language............
"Garden" in not gender specific in Englisg; it does not have a masculine or feminine form. While romance languages such as Spanish, French and Latin have a great number of gender specific terms, English has very few, and even these are going by the wayside from disuse, such as "actor" and "actress".
No. In this case vegetable is an adjective describing the type of garden. Garden is just a regular noun.
mi propio/a (male/female, depending on gender of object in question) mi propio jardin - my own garden mi propia casa - my own house
All English nouns are of common gender.
Gender is genderless (in English) and as a reference to the sex of a person.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun rabbit is it. If you know the gender of the rabbit, the pronouns are he or she (subject), and him or her(object). Example:Why did the rabbit cross the road? Because it saw my vegetable garden on the other side!
garden
Doctor is a neuter gender
"to garden" is the same as "work in the garden"
The antonym of the noun 'gender' is genderlessness, a word for the state of having no gender.
Examples of gender nouns for males:fathersonunclebrothermankingmanboarbuckbullramroosterExamples of gender nouns for females:motherdaughterauntsisterwomanqueensowdoecowewehenExamples of common gender nouns:parentchildrelativesiblingpersonneighborfriendbirddeersheephorsecatExamples of neuter gender nouns:anchorballchairdooreducationfacegearharpicejokekitelunch
English uses gender specific nouns for male, female, common gender (words that can be a male or a female), and neuter nouns (words for things that have no gender). Some examples are:Male gender: father, male parent.Female gender: mother, female parent.Common gender: parent.Neuter gender: relationship.Male gender: bull, adult male bovine.Female gender: cow, adult female bovine.Common gender: cattle, oxen, bison, and buffalo; types of bovine.Neuter gender: hamburger.