Granddaughter is a singular, common, female noun.
"grandmother's" is a possessive adjective. It shows possession and modifies a noun.
The word granddaughter is a noun. The plural form is granddaughters.
It is Granddaughter.
There is no gender in the English noun. All English nouns are of common gender, even those denoting specifically male or female creatures. t's masculine (male). In feminine (female), it's heiress.
granddaughter
A common gender noun is a word for a person or animal that can be either male or female; for example:common gender: person (gender nouns male or female, mother or father, man or worman)common gender: horse (gender nouns stallion or mare)common gender: pig (gender nouns boar or sow)General common gender nouns for people or animals that have no male or female noun are:partnerdoctorteacherteamherdflockNeuter gender nouns are words for things that have no gender; examples are:housechairskycarshoesfrost
Grand daughter is wrong it is granddaughter
granddaughter
It is Granddaughter.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender specific noun for the son of one's child is grandson.The gender specific noun for the daughter of one's child is granddaughter.
In Marathi grammar, "napusakaling" refers to neuter gender nouns. These nouns do not have a specific gender like masculine or feminine, and they often end in a special suffix "-a" or "-e".
Masculine.
In English grammar, the word "pig" is considered neuter gender, as it does not have a specific gender designation like "he" for male or "she" for female. It typically uses the pronoun "it."
In terms of grammar, grammatical gender varies by language. In English, cities are generally considered neutral in gender.
Irma V. Alarcon has written: 'The second language acquisition of Spanish gender agreement' -- subject(s): Comparative and general Grammar, Gender, Grammar, Comparative and general, Second language acquisition, Spanish language
In grammar, there are typically three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. Some languages, such as German or Latin, may have additional genders such as common or animate.
There is no gender in the English noun. All English nouns are of common gender, even those denoting specifically male or female creatures. t's masculine (male). In feminine (female), it's heiress.
granddaughter
To eliminate gender bias, revise the sentence to read "The candidate must possess strong leadership skills."