In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female.
The noun 'baker' is a common gender noun, a noun for a male or a female who bakes.
The feminine form of charmant is charmante. The feminine plural is charmantes.
The feminine form of benefactor is benefactress.
Tragedienne
The plural form for the noun baker is bakers.
A stallion is a male horse that has not been neutered so he is capable of impregnating a female horse. The feminine form of stallion is a mare.
The feminine form of ami is amie. The feminine plural is amies.
The feminine form of bajo is baja. The feminine plural is bajas.
The feminine form of alumnus is alumna. The feminine plural is alumnae.
Baroness is the feminine form.
Mistress is the feminine form of master. It is already in feminine form.
The feminine form of charmant is charmante. The feminine plural is charmantes.
The feminine form for host is "hostess."
baker's
The feminine form of benefactor is benefactress.
The feminine form of "mauvais" is "mauvaise."
Brittney has no Scottish form as a given name, so it is not 'translated'a non-Gaelic name is usually left in its original form. This also true for Baker.In the past some surnames were given gaelicized forms:the feminine version would be Nic an Fuineadair for Baker.
Ta means "your" before a feminine, singular noun.