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In English: A house, the house, houses, the houses.
Norwegian declination of neuter nouns: Et ~, det ~et, ~, de ~ene Giving (as house is "hus" in Norwegian, and that is a neuter noun): Et hus, det huset, hus, de husene. I hope this helps!
A word for a thing that has no gender is a neuter noun.Examples of neuter nouns are:anchorballchairdiamondeducationfudgegraniteharpislandjokekneelunchmoneynotebookorangeplasticquestionrestaurantstartroubleunguentvegetablewaterxenonyearzoo
A neuter gender word is a noun or a pronoun for something that has no gender.The neuter pronouns are it (singular), they(subjective plural) and them (objective plural).Some examples of neuter nouns are:actionballooncaredooredgefistgashopeicejuicekneelovemountainnatureovalpointquietrazorsporttableunguentvaluewaterx-rayyellowzoo
I don't know of the word "nutar," but "neuter," pronounced the same, refers in some languages to a gender category: "neither masculine nor feminine." Remember, there is no real grammatical gender among nouns in English. There are masculine (he,him,his), feminine (she,her,hers) and neuter (it,its) pronouns. The masculine and feminine agree with nouns indicating, respectively, male or female animate beings. Neuter pronouns agree with inanimate nouns. You can call those nouns neuter if you like, but, apart from pronoun agreement, the category has practically no significance. Not all nouns with neuter pronoun agreement should be called neuter. Names of animate nouns of indeterminate sex - cat, dog - are not neuter, but can take a neuter pronoun, (or a masc. or fem. if you happen to know the sex of your particular cat or dog.
The neuter noun for "king" and "queen" would be "monarch." In linguistics, a neuter noun is one that does not have a gender distinction. "Monarch" is a gender-neutral term that can refer to a ruler regardless of their gender.
Neuter nouns are words for things that have no gender, things like rock, oxygen, sky, knowledge, letter, mountain, toast, and hamburger.
A neuter noun is a word for something that has no gender.Examples of neuter nouns are:algebraautomobilecomputercandleeducationempireletterlunchSeptemberskyyearyellow
Examples of nouns for a male:boyfatherkingunclestallionroosterExamples of nouns for a female: sistermotherqueenniecemarehenExamples of common gender nouns: accountantparentneighborrelativehorsepoultryExamples of neuter nouns: addressboatchairdreameducationfudge
Examples of nouns that are gender specificare:FOR A MALEboyfatherkingunclestallionroosterFOR A FEMALEsistermotherqueenniecemarehenExamples of common gender nouns, words that can be for a male or a female are:accountantparentneighborrelativehorsepoultryExamples of neuter nouns, words for things that have no gender are:addressboatchairdreameducationfudge
All English nouns are of common gender.
In Marathi grammar, "napusakaling" refers to neuter gender nouns. These nouns do not have a specific gender like masculine or feminine, and they often end in a special suffix "-a" or "-e".
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female; common gender nouns that are words for a male or a female; and neuter gender nouns for things having no gender. The noun bridge is a neuter noun.
Depending on gender, the basic translation of anis ein (masculine and neuter nouns)or eine (feminine nouns).