In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'geese' is the plural form of the singular noun 'goose', a common gender noun, a noun for a male or a female.
The noun for a female is also goose. The noun for a male is gander.
geese
Yes, the word 'geese' is a noun, the plural form for the noun goose; a word for a type of bird, a word for a thing.
The word geese is the plural form of goose.The plural possessive form is geese's.
penguin is a masculine word and it is un manchot. there is no feminine form of that word because it is masculine.
Yes, the word geese's is the plural possessive form of the singular noun goose.Example: The geese's formation is a letter V.
Executrix
A barber would be the masculine form of the word hairdresser.
Seigneur
Yes, 'buena' is the feminine form of the word 'good'. The masculine form is 'bueno'. It is pronounced BWAYnah (feminine) BWAYnaw (masculine)
The masculine form of Sally would be Sal, possibly "short" for Salvadore or Salvatore.
attentif (masc.), attentive (fem.). In most cases, the masculine form is ---if where the feminine form is ---ive.
The French word "stylo", deriving from the longer form of the word, "stylographe", meaning "pen", is masculine.