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, for example:
A male grandparent is grandfather; a female grandparent is grandmother.
The feminine form of grandfather is grandmother.
The singular possessive form of the word "grandfather" is "grandfather's."
The word "grandad" likely originated from the combination of "grand" (meaning impressive or excellent) and "dad" (a colloquial term for father). It is used to refer to one's paternal grandfather as a term of endearment or informal address.
The possessive form of the noun grandfather is grandfather's.Example: I'm spending the weekend at my grandfather's farm.
impaa - grandfather imma- grandmother
The feminine form of grandfather is grandmother.
The feminine version of bad is mauvaise in French.
I am pretty sure that Amiga is the feminine version of Amigo
its grande :)
The feminine form of vampire is vampiress. The feminine plural would be vampiresses.
Though dwarf is commonly used for both genders, the feminine form of dwarf is dwarfess. Another feminine version which is rather uncommon, is she-dwarf.
Feminine. You can tell because "la" is the singular, feminine version of "the" ('Las' is the plural). The singular, masculine version of "the" is "el" ('Los' is the plural).
piloto
Regina
A heroine
A mouse...
Elise.