Some popular feminine words are dainty, ladylike, and girly.
Some popular feminine words include: princess, queen, goddess, and diva. These words are often used to describe women in a positive or powerful light.
In French, you can often identify feminine words by the presence of the suffixes such as -e, -ion, -tion, -té, -elle, -ude, etc. However, the best way to learn the gender of a word is to memorize it along with the vocabulary.
Some popular masculine words include strong, confident, independent, and assertive. These words are commonly associated with traditional masculine traits and characteristics.
"Viva la revolución" is correct because "revolución" is a feminine noun in Spanish. The article "la" is used before feminine singular nouns.
There is no definite answer to this question as it depends on how you count and categorize words. However, in Spanish, there are some noun endings that are typically masculine or feminine, but overall the language has a balance of masculine and feminine words.
In French, nouns are either masculine or feminine. The gender of a noun will determine the form of any adjectives or articles used with it.
The feminine given name Doris was most popular in the US in 1950.
Calculator is feminine in French. The French word for calculator, calculatrice, ends in an e. Most words that end in e in French are feminine. Not always, but most of the time, you can rely on that rule.
Banco is masculine as are most words that end in O
In French, you can often identify feminine words by the presence of the suffixes such as -e, -ion, -tion, -té, -elle, -ude, etc. However, the best way to learn the gender of a word is to memorize it along with the vocabulary.
Bicyclette is feminine. In words ending in "ette" in French, are feminine.
Mediator. There is no separate form. In most cases, feminine versions of words like executrix have gone out of use, while executor is applicable to both genders.
The word rate, like most words in English, does not come in masculine and feminine forms, there is just one form for both genders. It's just rate.
It is the feminine of Wilhelm or William ( Bill() it is not a very popular name except obviously with the Dutch.It's derived from Germanic words meaning "will" and "helmet."
In English it is neither. Most of the words in English don't come with a gender. Cheese is neutral... an "it."
une dent is a feminine noun in French.
Words ending '-ion' are always feminine.
Feminine, words ending with A tend to be Fem and words ending with O tend to be Mas.