In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.
The noun for a male who ruled Russia before 1917 is czar.
The noun for a female who ruled Russia before 1917 is czarina.
The noun czarina is also a word for the wife of a czar.
Marquis is the masculine form of Marchioness
Widower is the masculine form of someone who has lost a spouse through death. A widow if the female form.
attentif (masc.), attentive (fem.). In most cases, the masculine form is ---if where the feminine form is ---ive.
Articles and other adjectives do not have masculine and feminine forms in English.
The masculine form: favori The feminine form: favorite
The masculine gender of czarina is czar.
that is the masculine form
Gerald is the masculine form. The feminine form is Geraldine.
The masculine form for "tendre" in French is "tendre" as well. The word does not change in form based on gender.
Dennis is the masculine form of Denise.
The masculine form of master is "master." Both masculine and feminine forms of this term are the same.
The masculine plural form of malo is malos
It is spelled Führer, and it is the masculine form of "the leader"
A government controlled by a Tsar (Czar) is called a Tsarist Autocracy. Essentially a form of absolute monarchy.
Marquis is the masculine form of Marchioness
The masculine form of "blonde" in French is "blond."
"Ami" is the masculine form for "friend" in French. The feminine form is "amie," pronounced exactly the same.