In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'hero' is a gender specific noun for a male.
The noun 'heroine' is a gender specific noun for a female.
It should be noted, however, that many gender specific nouns for females are being supplanted by using the gender specific noun for males as common gender or gender neutral nouns. Today the noun 'hero' is used for a male or a female.
The masculine form of heroine is hero. Heroine is just a woman superhero.
Hero
I think you mean heroine, and the masculine would be hero. If you mean the drug, it is a neutral.
héros (masculine), or héroïne (feminine)
The French word for 'hero' is heros. It's a masculine gender noun that begins with an aspirated 'h'. The form of its definite article therefore is 'le', which means 'the'.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'hero' is a gender specific noun for a male.The noun 'heroine' is a gender specific noun for a female.It should be noted, however, that many gender specific nouns for females are being supplanted by using the gender specific noun for males as common gender or gender neutral nouns. Today the noun 'hero' is used for a male or a female.
Masculine
I think its heroenAnswerheroine A female hero is not the same as a heroine. A "heroine" is the passive goal of the hero's actions in romances, for example; while a "female hero" is the female alternative of the hero.Maybe these terms were created under a male perspective...
It is masculine.
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.
masculine
Masculine. Normally, nouns that end in O in Spanish are masculine.