In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female.
The word 'unique' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The adjective 'unique' is a neuter word, it has no gender.
The word "Greek" applies to masculine, feminine, and neutral. There is no separate feminine form.
Pronoun. Feminine, third person singular.
In French, the feminine form of "architecte" is also "architecte." The word is gender-neutral, meaning it is used for both male and female architects without changing the form. However, when specifying a female architect, one might refer to her as "une architecte."
The feminine form of "intelligent" is "intelligent." In English, adjectives do not have separate masculine and feminine forms. The term "intelligent" is gender-neutral and can be used to describe individuals of any gender.
In English there is no division of objects into masculine and feminine, a Museum is an IT.
The feminine form of ami is amie. The feminine plural is amies.
The feminine form of alumnus is alumna. The feminine plural is alumnae.
The feminine form of bajo is baja. The feminine plural is bajas.
Mistress is the feminine form of master. It is already in feminine form.
Baroness is the feminine form.
The feminine form of charmant is charmante. The feminine plural is charmantes.
The feminine form for host is "hostess."
The feminine form of benefactor is benefactress.
The feminine form of "mauvais" is "mauvaise."
Yes, the term "sorceress" is feminine, referring specifically to a female practitioner of magic or sorcery. It is the feminine form of "sorcerer," which denotes a male practitioner. In literature and folklore, sorceresses are often depicted with unique traits and powers distinct from their male counterparts.
Ta means "your" before a feminine, singular noun.
The masculine form of "duke" is "duke," and the feminine form is "duchess."