In French, some words are masculine, others are feminine.
Table, chair, fork (for instance) are feminine in French: they go with the articles "une" (indefinite) or "la" (definite) : une table, une chaise, une fourchette.
Basket, glass, book are masculine: article "un" or "le": un panier, un verre, un livre.
The plural of "le" or "la" is "les".
Generally you put an S at the end of a word to form the plural. But there are exceptions...
To sum it up:
la table, feminine singular.
les tables, feminine plural.
Feminine is an adjective, so there is no plural... Female is the noun. So, females.
La pomme is feminine singular, les pommes feminine plural
plural
Feminine
'terminé, terminée'fini (masculine singular)finis (masculine plural)finie (feminine singular)finies (feminine plural)orterminé (masculine singular)terminés (masculine plural)terminée (feminine singular)terminées (feminine plural)
plural, it means are in they are
The plural of l'amie (friend, singular feminine) is les amies. (plural feminine). The French articles are le for masculine and la for feminine, but in front of a vowel it is l' .
Singular feminine: Brune or châtain(for hair)Plural: Brunes, châtains For shoes: marron (invariable)
Argentino (masculine), Argentina (feminine), Argentinos (plural masculine), Argentinas (plural feminine).
The feminine form of charmant is charmante. The feminine plural is charmantes.
o,a, os, as. masculine singular, feminine singular, masculine plural, feminine plural)All of them is translated as "The" in english.
Masculine Singular: Ese Feminine Singular: Esa Masculine Plural: Esos Feminine Plural: Esas