The gender specific noun for a male who supports the arts is a patron.
The gender specific noun for a female who supports the arts is patroness.
The noun 'patron' as a word for a customer of a business is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
The noun 'patron' is a common gender noun as a word for a regular customer of a store, restaurant, or other business.
The noun 'patron' is a common gender noun or a gender specific noun for a male as a word for someone who gives financial or other support to a person, organization, or cause.
The gender specific noun for a female who gives financial or other support to a person, organization, or cause is patroness.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The gender specific noun for a male who supports the arts is a patron.
The gender specific noun for a female who supports the arts is patroness.
The noun 'patron' as a word for a customer of a business is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
"Patron" is used as a title for both genders, as the Latin form of the word, patronus, is gender-neutral.
People mistakenly associate "patron" with the Old French word "pater", which meant "father". But the origin of "patron" was not French, it was Latin.
Although "patron" is gender-neutral, some people have invented a more feminine-variant such as patroness and patrone.
Some organisations refer to female patrons as "matrons", though these days it is easy to mistake the title for that of a head nurse.
The noun 'patroness' is a gender specific noun for a female.
There is no gender specific noun for a male.
The noun patron is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
'Patroness' However, 'patron' is masculine and indicates 'father'. So 'patroness' is making a 'father' into a 'woman'. A better word in 'matron' , but this has medical/hospital overtones.
The term saint applies to both male and female.
The feminine form of patron is patroness.
matron or matriarch work in most cases.
The masculine form of the noun is patron.
Countess is the feminine term
Feminine of English man
feminine
The feminine form of charmant is charmante. The feminine plural is charmantes.
'Nanny' IS the feminine for goat.
There is no feminine, 'patron' is genderless.
Saint Gabriella is the patron saint of communication workers. She is the feminine form of Gabriel.
This is feminine because we are not speaking of the patron saint, (definitely masculine) but of the celebration: la saint-Valentin means in fact 'la fête de Saint-Valentin'. Fête is a feminine noun and even thought the word is dropped out, the feminine stays when speaking of the celebration.
Patrona in the feminine and patrono in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "patron." The respective pronunciations will be "pa-TRO-na" about a female and "pa-TRO-no" about a male in Italian.
This is the feminine form of Saint Yvo (Ivo), a great French lawyer called the "Advocate of the Poor." He is the patron saint of lawyers.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'patroness' is a word for a female who supports the work of writers, artists, or musicians, most often by giving them money.The corresponding noun 'patron' is a common gender noun, a word for a person (male or female) who supports the work of writers, artists, or musicians.The noun 'patron' is also a common gender noun as a word for a regular customer of a business establishment.
feminine
feminine, i believe
No, there is no patron saint of billiards.
Archangels are patron saints but do not have patron saints
The patron saint of your diocese would be the patron for the town. What is the name of your cathedral? That would be your patron.
The Patron Saint Index lists no patron saint of dinosaurs.