Not one of the verbs is feminine because verbs do not have gender in French.
Specifically, the verb "fait" means "(He/she/it) does/makes, does do/make, is doing/making." The verb "fais" means "(informal singular You) are doing/making, do/make, do do/make." The infinitive "faire" means "to do, to make."
But the subject of "fait" may be feminine depending upon the noun or pronoun that is used. For example, "il fait" is used for "he." The word "she" requires "elle fait."
The respective pronunciations of the verbs are "feh," feh," and "fehr."
The verb "faire" is not inherently feminine. It is a gender-neutral verb that means "to do" or "to make" in French.
The Passé Composé of 'faire' is 'avoir fait'.
The past participle of "faire" in French is "fait".
The conjugated form of "avoir" and "fait." Example: Tu as fait ton devoir.
To do = faire He does his homework = Il fait ses devoirs.
The passé composé of "faire" is "j'ai fait" for the first person singular (I have done). It is formed with the auxiliary verb "avoir" in the present tense followed by the past participle of "faire."
"un fait" is a fact or a deed."en fait" > indeed"faire" is to do. (je fais : I do, tu fais : you do, il ou elle fait : he or she does)
To do - faire I do - Je fais You do - Tu fais He does - Il fait She does - Elle fait We do - Nous faisons You (plural) do - Vous faites They do - Ils font They (female) do - Elles font
fais aujourd'hui ce que tu veux faire means 'do today what you want to do'
Present: je fais, tu fais, il / elle fait, nous faisons, vous faites, ils / elles font. Other forms in link.
Je fais - I do Tu fais - You do (informal) Il/Elle/On fait - He/She/One/We do(es) Nous faisons - We do Vous faites - You do (formal or plural) Ils/Elles font - They do
the "fais" is actually spelled "fait" and it means "After the church what'd you do".
The Passé Composé of 'faire' is 'avoir fait'.
The passé composé of "faire" is "j'ai fait" for the first person singular (I have done). It is formed with the auxiliary verb "avoir" in the present tense followed by the past participle of "faire."
The past participle of "faire" in French is "fait".
Il fais grismeans It is grey. Il meaning it. Fais meaning Is. And Gris meaning grey.
a snowboard is "une planche à neige", but the French just say "le snowboard". Snowboarding could be "faire de la planche à neige", or "Faire du snowboard". "Je Fais du Snowboard"- I snowboard "Il Fait du Snowboard"- He snowboards "J'ai fait du snowboard"- I snowboarded "Je faisais du snowboard"- I was snowboarding "Tu aime faire du snowboard?"- Do you like snowboarding? "Je voudrais faire du snowboard"- I want to snowboard.
I did(Je fais) You did(Tu fait) He/She did(Il/Elle fait) You(formal)did(Vous avez) We did(Nous avons) They did(Ils/Elles sont)