"die Wissenschaft" (feminine)
it is das Ei (neuter)
"Actriz" is a feminine noun. "Actor" is the masculine.
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.
Andes is a masculine noun in Spanish.
"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."
Butter is "beurre" in French, a masculine noun.
The noun "papel" is a masculine noun in Spanish.
In French, "croissant" is a masculine noun.
"Gens" is a feminine noun in French.
masculine
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun 'Switzerland' is a neuter noun, a word for a thing that has no gender. The word for Switzerland is feminine in both German and French French: La Suisse German: Die Schweiz.
It is a masculine noun