In Spanish some adjectives such as "fácil" (easy) or "difícil" (hard) have a common form for both masculine and femenine: "el trabajo es fácil" (the job is easy, masc. "el trabajo"), "la bajada es fácil" (the descent is easy, fem. "la bajada"). Also notice the "tilde" (acute accent) goes on the "a" in "fácil", not on the "i".
if the word ends in "cion" or "sion" it is feminine
Feminine, words ending with A tend to be Fem and words ending with O tend to be Mas.
Guapa or Guapo ending a is feminine e is masculine
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In Spanish, yes, there can be feminine endings on past participles. English does not have gender-specific endings on past participles.
Feminine All Spanish words ending in a are f & in o are m. I remember it by~ Abercrombie & Fitch & Oh man
No, revolución is feminine (in fact most all words in Spanish ending in "ción" are feminine).
Yes. For example, alto (tall) is for boys and altais for girls.Alto-alta is an adjective.Example of nouns:Car: coche is "el coche" with the masculine article. So it is a masculine noun.Mother: madre is "la madre" with the feminine article.
Revista is feminine.
feminine word in spanish (nose)