The masculine gender of "tailor" is simply "tailor" itself, as the term is gender-neutral and can refer to both male and female individuals who sew and make clothing. In contexts where a distinction is necessary, one might use "male tailor" to specifically denote a man in that profession. Alternatively, "seamstress" is often used to refer to women who sew, although it specifically denotes a female.
There is no gender for the noun dressmaker or for the person who is a dressmaker, a dressmaker can be a male or a female.
The opposite gender of tailor in Hindi is "darzi" which means male tailor.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. There are some archaic terms for a man who sews: seamster, sewer, sempster, sartor, modiste, but these terms are rarely used today. The language is using more common gender nouns for jobs and professions. Tailor is now the generally preferred term.
The masculine gender of czarina is czar.
Husband is the masculine gender for a spouse.
The masculine gender equivalent for "lass" is "lad."
The masculine gender equivalent of "lass" is "lad."
All English nouns are of common gender.
The masculine gender of Eve is Adam.
The word for monkey is masculine. It is le singe.
Tailor. Answer in tailoress, but without ess
governor