une guitare (fem.)
The guitar fret is called "frette" (feminine noun) in French.
Feminine
i don't know but it's either Portuguese or french
Guitare is a French equivalent of the English word "guitar." The feminine singular noun may be preceded immediately by the feminine singular la since French employs definite articles even when English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(la) ghee-tar" in French.
Guitar originated as a Greek word: κιθάραIt also made its way toFrench: guitareSpanish: guitarra (the word we used to get guitar)Italian: chitarraIt also had a separate journey through the Latin form:citharaItalian: cetraOld High German: citharaModern German: zitherFrench: cithareEnglish: cither
A guitar string is "une corde de guitare" in French.
The etymology of the word "guitar" is early 17th century: from Spanish guitarra (partly via French), from Greek kithara, denoting an instrument similar to the lyre.
It comes from the Spanish word guitarra, and the Spanish got it originally from the French and (farther back) Greek languages.
The greek word for guitar is κιθάρα, and it is pronounced keethara
In French, "guitar" is feminine, so it is "la guitare."
'une guitare' (fem.)
ギター (gitaa) is the Japanese word for "Guitar".