The word 'celui' means the one. It's the masculine singular form. The masculine plural is 'ceux'. The feminine singular form is 'celle', the plural 'celles'.
Segreto is an Italian equivalent of the English word "secret".Specifically, the Italian word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form or as the masculine singular form of an adjective. The adjective's feminine singular form is segreta. The pronunciation will be "sey-GREY-to" as a masculine adjective/noun and "sey-GREY-ta" as a feminine adjective.
In French, "Danes" (referring to people from Denmark) is considered masculine. The noun "Danois" is used for both a masculine singular form and feminine plural form, while "Danoise" is used for the feminine singular form.
Alumni is the plural of alumnus; the feminine form alumni is alumnae. The feminine form of alumnus is alumna.
"Quel" is a masculine form of "which" or "what" in French, used before masculine singular nouns. "Quelle" is a feminine form of "which" or "what" in French, used before feminine singular nouns.
o,a, os, as. masculine singular, feminine singular, masculine plural, feminine plural)All of them is translated as "The" in english.
Singular form: el estudiante Plural form: los estudiantes To make the plural form of a masculine noun, simply add an "s" to the singular form if the noun ends in a vowel (a,e,i,o,u) if it ends in a consonant add "es". Singular form: el color plural form: los colores Articles need to agree in number and gender with nouns so you will need to change the article too from singular to plural. Masculine singular: el Masculine plural: los
"Said" or "saying" may be English equivalents of "detto."When translated as "said" or "told," the Italian word is the past participle of the infinitive "dire." This is the masculine singular form. The masculine plural form is "detti," which is pronounced "DEHT-tee."The feminine singular form is "detta." It is pronounced "DEHT-tah." The feminine plural form is "dette." The pronunciation is "DEHT-teh."When translated as "saying," the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").As is the case with the masculine singular past participle, the pronunciation is "DEHT-toh."
Compagna in the feminine and compagno in the masculine are two of many Italian equivalents of the English word "mate".Specifically, the Italian forms are the feminine and masculine forms of a noun in the singular. The feminine form may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or the feminine singular indefinite article una ("a, one"). The masculine form may follow the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un, uno ("a, one").The pronunciation will be "kohm-PAH-nyah" in the feminine and "kohm-PAH-nyoh" in the masculine.
Papavero is an Italian equivalent of "poppy." The masculine singular noun in question may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un, uno ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "PA-pa-VEY-ro" in Italian.
Punto is an Italian equivalent of the English word "dot".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un ("a"). The pronunciation will be "POON-to" in Italian.
Veilleux (masculine form- singular and plural) means old .