In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun 'virgin' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female person who is inexperienced.
The word 'virgin' is also an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.
masculine
Marquis is the masculine form of Marchioness
"Comedian" is the masculine. "Comedienne" is the female equivalent.
Translation: Virgin or small virgin
Bizarre is an adjective. It is neither masculine nor feminine.
Marian or Of the Blessed Virgin Mary is the English equivalent of 'Mariana'. The word in Italian is the feminine form of an adjective. The masculine form is 'Mariano'. The feminine form is pronuonced 'mah-ree-AH-nah' and the masculine 'mah-ree-AH-noh'.
Masculine
It is masculine.
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.
masculine
Masculine. Normally, nouns that end in O in Spanish are masculine.
Feminine
Masculine
In French, "apricot" (abricot) is a masculine noun.
Masculine
Masculine
bureau is masculine