waitress is the feminine
waitress is the feminine
The feminine form of waiter is waitress.
It is waitress.
It is waitress.
waitress
The feminine form is 'Waiteress'.
Filles. Just like in English, the feminine of "boys" is a completely distinct word for "girls" (as opposed to "waiter", where the feminine is "waitress".)
Waiter.
No, 'waitress' is feminine. The masculine term is 'waiter.' The usual unisex term is 'server.'
It can mean a waiter or someone or something that provides you with a service of some kind. feminine : serveuse (a barmaid) Un serveur can also be a server computer
In general, English words ending in -ress that refer to a female can be modified to apply to a male by replacing -ress with -er or -or. This is not ALWAYS the case, but it USUALLY is. Unfortunately you'll probably have to guess which of the two you should use in any given case; for example it's actress/actor but waitress/waiter.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun 'waiter' is the gender specific noun for a male. The corresponding gender specific noun for a female is 'waitress'. The common gender noun 'server' is a word for a male or a female.