In English, NO GENDER is applied to inanimate objects.
One pencil
Many pencils
Masculine - el lápiz
Quel, quels, quelle, quelles, are the different versions (masculine singular, masculine plural, feminine singular, feminine plural) of the English word 'what'.
Singular and masculine = Prince Plural and masculine = Princes Singular and feminine = Princess.
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mer) In Spanish it is masculine (el mar) In Welsh it is masculine (y mor)
The French word acteur is masculine in gender. The masculine singular noun, whose feminine equivalent is actrice, means "actor" in English. The pronunciation will be "ak-tuhr" in the masculine and "ak-treess" in the feminine in French.
Ma (followed by a feminine noun) means "my" in English. It is a possessive; the masculine is 'mon', the plural for both is 'mes'.
Masculine, Plural.
Masculine Singular: Ese Feminine Singular: Esa Masculine Plural: Esos Feminine Plural: Esas
Joli (masculine, singular), jolis (masculine, plural), jolie (feminine, singular) and jolies (feminine plural) mean pretty. Beau (masculine, singular), beaux (masculine, plural), belle (feminine, singular) and belles (feminine, plural) mean beautiful. If you want to use the masculine, singular word for beautiful but the word after beings with a vowel, you use bel instead.
This is dependent on whether the thing you are referring to as yours is masculine, feminine or plural. If it is masculine the word "mon" is used. If is is feminine the word "ma" is used. If it is plural the word "mes" is used regardless of whether the object is feminine or masculine.
The Spanish word "puertas" is feminine, and plural.
The correct adjective form of the Spanish word "gordo" is "gorda" when used to describe a feminine noun, and "gordowhen used to describe a masculine noun.
Adjective: זהוב = Zahov (masculine) זהובה = Zehuva (feminine) זהובים = Zehuvim (masculine plural) זהובות = Zehuvot (feminine plural)
The word "sad" is feminine and masculine when translated from English to French. The most common translation will be triste in the feminine and masculine singular and tristes in the feminine and masculine plural. The pronunciation will remain "treest" in both the singular and plural.
lección is a feminine word in Spanish, therefore its plural is las lecciones
it depends on what you are describing...if it is a masculine singular item- yafeif it is a masculine plural- yafimif it is a feminine singular item- yafaand if it is feminine plural- yafot
Quel, quels, quelle, quelles, are the different versions (masculine singular, masculine plural, feminine singular, feminine plural) of the English word 'what'.
The word 'deux' (two) is neither feminine nor masculine because it is not a noun.