There is no gender in the English noun.
giantess
Fire Giants Hill Giants Ice Giants Moss Giants
All English nouns are of common gender.
Gender is genderless (in English) and as a reference to the sex of a person.
a percussion of giants
You can pick them up, you can get them when you kill giants such as: Hill giants. Fire giants, Ice giants or Moss giants.
A 'giant' describes any person or thing of unusually or abnormally large size. The word is not gender-specific: you can refer to a male or female person or other creature as a 'giant'.The term giantess was used in mythology and other fiction to refer to a female giant, usually in similar context to the term 'ogre' or 'monster'. It is now considered archaic, and certainly today we wouldn't refer to a female person suffering from gigantism, a hormonal imbalance resulting in abnormal growth, as a giantess.
Doctor is a neuter gender
Giants. Jets are cool to but I just like the giants better.
Natural gender languages assign gender to nouns based on the actual gender of the living beings they represent, such as English. Grammatical gender languages assign gender to nouns based on arbitrary rules, such as Spanish or French. In natural gender languages, gender is inherent to the noun's meaning, while in grammatical gender languages, gender is a grammatical feature that may not correspond to the noun's actual gender.
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