In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun (gerund) dancing is a neuter noun, a word that has no gender.
Bella ballerina in the feminine and bello ballerino in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "beautiful dancer." The second-mentioned example also may translate into English as "handsome dancer." The respective pronunciations will be "BEL-la BAL-ley-REE-na" in the feminine and "BEL-lo BAL-ley-REE-no" in the masculine in Italian.
Nouns in English are neither masculine nor feminine.
In English there is no division of objects into masculine and feminine, a Museum is an IT.
This is an English word. English words are never masculine or feminine (except him, her, he, she, etc.).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'advantage' is a neuter noun, a word for something that has no gender.
English does not have masculine or feminine genders for words.
English does not have masculine and feminine versions of nouns.
In linguistics, nouns in French and Spanish have gender (masculine or feminine), but in English, there is no gender assigned to inanimate objects like bagels. So, a bagel is neither masculine nor feminine in English.
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mer) In Spanish it is masculine (el mar) In Welsh it is masculine (y mor)
There is no word in English spelled 'gaunts'.The nearest English word is gaunt, an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In English there are no masculine or feminine forms.
English does not have a rule that makes nouns feminine of masculine, pragmatically "objects" like hotels have no gender.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female.