The gender of "pie" can vary based on language and cultural context. In English, nouns do not have grammatical gender, so "pie" is neutral. However, in languages like French or Spanish, nouns have gender; for example, "tarte" (pie) in French is feminine, while "pastel" (cake) in Spanish is masculine. Ultimately, it depends on the language and cultural associations.
une fenêtre is feminine
tall is translated grand (masculine form) in French. The feminine is 'grande'.
In French, "gâteau" is masculine. Therefore, you would use masculine articles and adjectives with it, such as "le gâteau" for "the cake."
In French, the word for "floor" is "le sol," which is masculine. Therefore, it uses masculine articles and adjectives. For example, you would say "le sol propre" for "the clean floor."
In French, "gâteau" is masculine. The plural form is "gâteaux." When using it in sentences, you would refer to it as "le gâteau" for singular and "les gâteaux" for plural.
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
Feminine
its masculine no doubt
The Italian word torta is feminine, not masculine, in gender. The singular noun in question translates typically as "cake," "pie" or "tart." The pronunciation will be "TOR-ta" in Pisan Italian.
feminine
Masculine
masculine
Une école feminine
it is masculine so El
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
Masculine is the opposite of feminine.
feminine