In German, the word for ATM is "Geldautomat," which is masculine, so it uses the article "der" (der Geldautomat). The gender of nouns in German can vary, so it's important to memorize the article along with the noun.
feminine
In German, the word "Tag" is masculine. It is der Tag.
Die Kassette (feminine)
In German, the word for apple is "der Apfel," which is masculine. Therefore, it takes masculine articles and adjectives. In terms of grammatical gender, nouns in German can be masculine, feminine, or neuter, and "Apfel" falls into the masculine category.
"die Wissenschaft" (feminine)
there is no German word "ol"
Masculine, der Rollkragen
"Freund" is masculine and "Freundin" is feminine.
Yes, the German language has masculine, feminine, and neuter nouns. The gender of a noun determines the article used before it and can affect other parts of the sentence such as adjectives or pronouns.
No, it's masculine: "der Park".
The word "Lied" in German is neuter.
"Der spezieller Freund" in the masculine and "Die spezielle Freundin" in the feminine are German equivalents of "the special friend."The masculine singular definite article "der" and the feminine "die" mean "the." The masculine singular adjective "spezieller" and the feminine "spezielle" mean "special." The masculine singular noun "Freund" and the feminine "Freundin" mean "friend."