Roughly 60% of French words are masculine, while the remaining 40% are feminine.
The French have feminine and masculine words for African: africain (noun or adjective, masculine) and africaine (noun or adjective, feminine).
No. L'information, like most words in French that end in "tion", is feminine.
No, in French, masculine is "masculin" and Swiss is "suisse."
masculine
"Chocolat" is masculine in French.
A boot is 'une botte' in French. There is no masculine for that, as for a large proportion of French words which exist in one gender only.
The French have feminine and masculine words for African: africain (noun or adjective, masculine) and africaine (noun or adjective, feminine).
In French, adjectives and articles must agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun they modify. This means that the ending of the word may change to match the noun's gender. For example, "petit" becomes "petite" for feminine nouns. Verbs may also change according to the gender of the subject in some tenses.
le or Un
Le is for masculine words, la is for feminine words.
No. L'information, like most words in French that end in "tion", is feminine.
No, in French, masculine is "masculin" and Swiss is "suisse."
English words do not really have masculine or feminine - pays is a verb, present tense of to pay.
The indefinite article in French is un, masculine or une, feminine
The French words for pig are "cochon" or "porc" (both masculine nouns).un cochon
une dent is a feminine noun in French.
Words ending '-ion' are always feminine.