Yes, the name Ikaiah generally sounds masculine.
The masculine form of Ruby is Ruben.
"Duke" is a traditionally masculine name and title.
nouveau (masculine, singular)nouvel (masculine, singular, used in front of a vowel sound: un nouvel homme, un nouvel age, un nouvel élément)nouvelle (feminine, singular)nouveaux (masculine, plural; liaises with a "z" sound in front of a vowel sound)nouvelles (feminine, plural)
La Belgique is the French name for Belgium. It is a feminine noun which has no masculine.
My sons name is Jesse, which I feel is the masculine version. I've always seen "Jessie" as short for Jessica. I HATE it when people spell his name with an "ie". Very annoying. He's not a girl!
The name Jordan seems to be a girls name and boy name. It has a sound of masculine and feminine when you say it.
Rahul is a masculine name
KLOW*-dee-ah is an Italian pronunciation of 'Claudia'. The name is the same in English and Italian. As is the case with many Italian names, there are masculine and feminine equivalents. The masculine equivalent here is 'Claudio', which is pronounced 'KLOW-dee-oh'.*The sound 'ow' is similar to the sound of the adverb 'how'.
Sounds masculine
Billy is a masculine name. It is short for William.
The masculine form of Ruby is Ruben.
it is a masculine name normally but i think if it is spelt like "shaun" then it can be feminine.
"Duke" is a traditionally masculine name and title.
"Jews" is both masculine and gender-neutral.
I hope this helps: In Hebrew, there is no masculine form for the name Miriam (מרים). In English, the name Marion is is the masculine form of Marian or Miriam, but in Hebrew, there is no masculine form. "Marion" is not a Hebrew name, although it can be spelled מריון, but this would just be a foreign name to Hebrew speakers. The best thing to do, is choose an unrelated Hebrew name with a similar sound, such as: Ma'ayan (מעין) Ma'or (מאור) pronounced mah-or Me'ir (מאיר) pronounced meh-eer Meron (מרון)
Yah or Jah, the first part of YHVH, the name of God, is feminine in gender and Veh is masculine (NOT Weh as in YHWH, there is no w or w sound in Hebrew now nor has there ever been). God embodies both the feminine and the masculine.
Faruq is an Italian equivalent of the English name "Farouk." The masculine proper name serves as an Arabic loan name whose spelling tends to respect a spelling of "u" for an "oo" sound and "q" for a "k" sound in Italian. The pronunciation will be "fa-ROOK" in Pisan Italian.