A garden is "un jardin" (masc.) in French.
un trés beau jardin
Le jardin de devant.
'un nain de jardin'.
garden=jardin
gardens=jardins
jardin
"Garden" in not gender specific in Englisg; it does not have a masculine or feminine form. While romance languages such as Spanish, French and Latin have a great number of gender specific terms, English has very few, and even these are going by the wayside from disuse, such as "actor" and "actress".
Gardens
No - garden is singular, gardens is plural.
This is shephra it means long as a plural in French
Hortus is garden; horti is gardens.
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
Yes, "cahiers" is the plural form of the word "cahier" in French.
Mother is "mère" in French. The plural is "mères" (with the additional "s" as the plural mark)
The French word for lady is dame, the plural of which is dames.
A sister is "une soeur" in French. The plural is "des soeurs".
The noun 'garden' is a countable noun, a noun with a singular and a plural form.Examples:My neighbor has a pretty garden. (singular)Let's walk through the park to see all the gardens. (plural)
To do is translated "faire" in French. As a verb, it hasn't a plural but forms that you can use in the plural. Follow the link to find these conjugations.