"ton"
ton chapeau (masculine noun) = your hat
"ta" (fem.) : ta voiture (your car)
"tes" (plural, for both masc. or fem.)
tes chapeaux, tes voitures
"your" (for the formal or plural "you")
votre > (for both masc. and fem.) votre chapeau, votre voiture (you all have one hat, one car)
vos > (for both masc; and fem., but in plural) vos chapeaux, vos voitures (you have several hats - maybe one for each of you- and several cars)
In French, "bridge" is considered masculine and is preceded by the masculine article "le." Therefore, you would say "le bridge" in French.
In French, if you want to describe your bedroom as masculine, you could say "chambre masculine," and if you want to describe it as feminine, you could say "chambre féminine."
It's masculine. You say "un pays".
The word "fly", in French, is feminine. When you want to say "the fly", you will say "la mouche".
In French, "sandwich" is considered masculine and is preceded by the masculine article "le." So, you would say "le sandwich."
In French, "bridge" is considered masculine and is preceded by the masculine article "le." Therefore, you would say "le bridge" in French.
In French, if you want to describe your bedroom as masculine, you could say "chambre masculine," and if you want to describe it as feminine, you could say "chambre féminine."
Francais, this is the masculine form
It's masculine. You say "un pays".
L'orchestre (masculine)
'tapis'
The word "fly", in French, is feminine. When you want to say "the fly", you will say "la mouche".
In French, "sandwich" is considered masculine and is preceded by the masculine article "le." So, you would say "le sandwich."
"Diary" is masculine in French. It is translated as "le journal intime."
A folder is "un dossier" (masculine noun) in French.
La Belgique. This is a feminine noun with no masculine version.
L'été (masculine noun).