The gender of an adjective in Spanish is determined by the gender of the noun it describes. If the noun is feminine, the adjective should be in its feminine form. If the noun is masculine, the adjective should be in its masculine form.
Nationale (feminine), national (masculine). The difference is in the final "e"
Mince is both a masculine and feminine adjective in French.
Gris is a masculine adjective in French. The feminine adjective is grise (with an additional 'e' at the end)
It can be either masculine - intelligent - or feminine - intelligente (as is the case the nearly all adjectives in French) and it can be plural as well.
"Riche" in French is a masculine adjective. The feminine form of "riche" is "riche" when used as an adjective.
Petite is the feminine form of the adjective 'small'. Its masculine counterpart is petit.
Nationale (feminine), national (masculine). The difference is in the final "e"
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.
Mince is both a masculine and feminine adjective in French.
Gris is a masculine adjective in French. The feminine adjective is grise (with an additional 'e' at the end)
It can be either masculine - intelligent - or feminine - intelligente (as is the case the nearly all adjectives in French) and it can be plural as well.
"Riche" in French is a masculine adjective. The feminine form of "riche" is "riche" when used as an adjective.
In Spanish, "gris" is a gender-neutral adjective, so it does not have a specific feminine or masculine form. It remains the same regardless of whether it is used to describe a feminine or masculine noun.
The masculine form of the French adjective "original" is "original." French adjectives do not have separate masculine and feminine forms; they remain the same regardless of the gender of the noun they describe.
In English, "mere" does not have a gender or masculine/feminine form as it is an adjective used to describe something as being small, slight, or minimal.
"Gentil" is a masculine adjective in French. The feminine is "gentille".
there are four. gordo- masculine singular gorda- feminine singular gordos- masculine plural gordas- feminine plural