Genre can have a few meanings depending on context.
It can mean "type" as in what type of thing is this.
It can mean "gender" in the linguistic sense as nouns in French have a "gender". La Chaise is a "female" word, le chapeau is a "male" word. Adverbs, verbs, will "change" to conform to the noun they represent. La chaise bleue, le chapeau bleu.
"Ce" is the French word for "this" in the masculine genre.
Genre can have a few meanings depending on context. It can mean "type" as in what type of thing is this. It can mean "gender" in the linguistic sense as nouns in French have a "gender". La Chaise is a "female" word, le chapeau is a "male" word. Adverbs, verbs, will "change" to conform to the noun they represent. La chaise bleue, le chapeau bleu.
if you mean the verb so it's 'aimer' if you mean the common word so it's 'comme' but also in common language, you can say 'genre'
In English, and French, there is no accent mark attached to the word, "genre." It is pronounced just was written in both languages.
it is not a French word
genre1770, as a French word in English (nativized from c.1840), from Fr. genre "kind, sort, style" (see gender). Used especially in French for "independent style." Of painting, "depicting scenes of ordinary life" (as compared to "landscape," "historical," etc.) from 1849.
if you mean the english word OR then it's ouif you mean the french word OR then it means gold
Genre is category or form of literature e.g horror, romance, fantasy
This is not a French word and means nothing in French.
There is no such word as 'rozelle' in French.
there is no such word as 'peneuf' in French.
hartford is not a french word.