Queen
In English, there is no distinction between masculine, feminine and neuter. Noun and verb forms are neutral. Gender is shown by different forms or different words. The noun king is a male regent; the noun queen is a female regent.
"Kind" in all its many meanings is a gender-neutral word. You didn't make a typo for "king" did you? The feminine form of King is Queen.
Countess is the feminine term
Feminine of English man
feminine
The masculine form of monarch is king, and the feminine form is queen.
Akhenaten
The feminine form or the word Raja ins Rani or Ranee. It is a term given to the wife of an Indian king.
Ryana is a feminine form of Ryan. Ryan means "king."
"Maha" is a prefix meaning "great" or "highest," and "rajah" means "king." In Hindi, "maharajah" is a masculine title for a king or prince. The feminine counterpart would be "maharani," with "rani" meaning "queen."
In English, there is no distinction between masculine, feminine and neuter. Noun and verb forms are neutral. Gender is shown by different forms or different words. The noun king is a male regent; the noun queen is a female regent.
"Kind" in all its many meanings is a gender-neutral word. You didn't make a typo for "king" did you? The feminine form of King is Queen.
Unlike other Indo-European linguistic branches (Italian, Spanish, Russian, Hindi, etc.) English does not have masculine and feminine words. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: man, woman mother, father uncle, aunt girl, boy husband, wife boar, sow doe, buck bull, cow hen, rooster king, queen sister, brother son, daughter
There are many instances of masculine names becoming solely feminine names in later centuries. Noga has a feminine sounding ending to it.
a girl who can be nice and mean
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.