In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun for a male mouse is buck. The noun for a female mouse doe.
Khanum is the feminine of Khan
it is minney mouse
If its in the field, its not a house mouse.
Mickey Mouse :-) Mickey Mouse :-)
A mouse...
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a male mouse is buck; the noun for a female mouse is doe.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun for a male mouse is buck. The noun for a female mouse doe.
A mouse (or computer mouse) is "une souris" (feminine noun, plural "des souris" - the last "s" is unvoiced) in French.
Yeah and i believe the male is a buck too(:
A female mouse is called a doe. (and a male mouse is called buck) newborns are pinkies
Topa forte in the feminine and topo forte in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "strong mouse."Specifically, the feminine noun topa and the masculine topo respectively mean "female mouse" and "male mouse." The feminine/masculine adjective forte translates as "strong." The pronunciation will be "TO-pa FOR-tey" in the feminine and "TO-po FOR-tey" in the masculine.
"Souris", as the singular beacause it already has an "s" at the end of the word.
I'm pretty sure it's simply the French word for mouse, which is "souris" (feminine). And a mouse mat is a "tapis de souris" (masculine). Hope that helped! :)
"Mouse" in English means souris (feminine) or souris mâle or le mâle de la souris (masculine) in French.
La topolina è morta in the feminine and Il topolino è morto in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "The little mouse is dead." The feminine and masculine singular declarative statements also may be rendered into English as "The dear (small, sweet) mouse is dead." The respective pronunciations will be "la TO-po-LEE-na eh MOR-ta" in the feminine and "eel TO-po-LEE-no eh MOR-to" in the mascuilne in Italian.
Feminine describes the gender of the French word chauve-souris. The feminine singular noun, which translates as "bat," with the literal wording of "bald mouse," may be preceded immediately by the feminine singular la since French employs definite articles where English does and does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(la) shov-soo-ree" in French.