In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'woman' is a gender specific noun for a female adult.
The gender specific noun for a male adult is man (which is also often used to mean mankind, humans as a species).
The masculine form of heroine is hero. Heroine is just a woman superhero.
The masculine form of "woman" is "man." In English, "man" typically refers to an adult male, while "woman" refers to an adult female. These terms are often used to distinguish gender in various contexts.
The masculine form of "donna," which means "woman" in Italian, is "uomo," meaning "man." In English, the equivalent term for "donna" is "lady," and its masculine counterpart is "gentleman." In general, the masculine form varies by language, but "man" is the common English equivalent.
that is the masculine form
The feminine form of an engaged woman is fiancée.The masculine form is fiancé.Therefore, the man will call his wife-to-be his fiancée.
The feminine form of an engaged woman is fiancée.The masculine form is fiancé.Therefore, the man will call his wife-to-be his fiancée.
Gerald is the masculine form. The feminine form is Geraldine.
Dennis is the masculine form of Denise.
The masculine plural form of malo is malos
Master is the masculine form. Mistress would be the feminine form.
The masculine form for "tendre" in French is "tendre" as well. The word does not change in form based on gender.
The term "chaperon" is generally considered masculine in gender. In English, it refers to a person, often a woman, who accompanies and supervises others, particularly young people. In French, "chaperon" is also masculine, while the feminine form is "chaperonne."