The masculine form of the word "madam" is "sir." Both terms are used as respectful forms of address, with "madam" typically referring to women and "sir" referring to men.
The masculine equivalent of "madam" is "sir."
penguin is a masculine word and it is un manchot. there is no feminine form of that word because it is masculine.
Madam is the full word. The abbreviation is Mme if you wanted to use it that way. You might be asking about the word 'mademoiselle', which is a French word.
The masculine form for "tendre" in French is "tendre" as well. The word does not change in form based on gender.
That is the correct spelling of the word "ma'am" It is a contraction form used in polite address. The actual word is madam.
A barber would be the masculine form of the word hairdresser.
Executrix
Change to masculin : Elles
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.Madam (abbreviated Mdm.) is a title used only in formal situations to address a female (Madam Ambassador, Madam Chairperson, etc.)Sir is an appropriate counterpart to address a male in formal situations.Mister (abbreviated Mr.) is the title for a male in less formal situations.Mistress (abbreviated Mrs.) is the title for a married female.Miss is the title for an unmarried female.Ms. is the title for a female without marital information. The noun 'Ms.' is not an abbreviation, it is a word created to eliminate marital status from the title of a female.
Yes. Madam is singular, the plural form is "mesdames." It's actually a French word that we borrowed. Many words in the English language are borrowed from other languages.
Seigneur
Yes, 'buena' is the feminine form of the word 'good'. The masculine form is 'bueno'. It is pronounced BWAYnah (feminine) BWAYnaw (masculine)