She uses masculine. If she is writing about herself, or another female, she would use feminine.
In French, a girl is considered feminine. The word for girl, "fille," is a feminine noun.
In French, nouns have gender (masculine or feminine) which is a grammatical feature. There isn't a specific reason why certain nouns are masculine or feminine, it's just a part of the language's structure. Learning the gender of nouns is important for correct grammar and agreement with other parts of speech.
Ma petite amie is a French equivalent of 'my girl'. The feminine possessive 'ma' means 'my'. The feminine adjective 'petite' means 'little'. The feminine noun 'fille'means 'girl, daughter'. All together, they're pronounced 'mah puh-tee-tah-mee'.ma fille
Unlike other Indo-European linguistic branches (Italian, Spanish, Russian, Hindi, etc.) English does not have masculine and feminine words. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: man, woman mother, father uncle, aunt girl, boy husband, wife boar, sow doe, buck bull, cow hen, rooster king, queen sister, brother son, daughter
You mean what are they...... for one guy you say Il for one girl you say Elle for a group for girls you say Elles for a group of girls with only one or more guys in it you would say Ils for just a group of guys you would say Ils For a group of guys with one girl you would still say Ils
In French, a girl is considered feminine. The word for girl, "fille," is a feminine noun.
The word "enfant" is both a masculine and a feminine in French, so you can write "un enfant" for a boy (or even a girl) or "une enfant" (for a girl only). The plural "les enfants" could be both feminine and masculine, but it is very likely that the vast majority of French speakers understand it as masculine, the masculine being also the mode you use in French when being "unspecific" about the gender.
Oh, dude, 'eleve' is masculine in French. It's like saying, "Oh, look at that cool 'eleve' over there," and you'd be talking about a dude student, not a dudette student. So, yeah, 'eleve' is all about the dudes in French.
It changes depending on what you say as the masculine and feminine article has to agree with the person. For example: My dad would be 'Mon père' which is masculine but my mum would be ma mère which is feminine.
In French, nouns have gender (masculine or feminine) which is a grammatical feature. There isn't a specific reason why certain nouns are masculine or feminine, it's just a part of the language's structure. Learning the gender of nouns is important for correct grammar and agreement with other parts of speech.
je suis en colère is neither feminine nor masculine. It means 'I am angry'. The fact this is a boy - or a girl - speaking would not turn the phrase into masculine or feminine. Only nouns and the related adjectives have a gender in French, but not the sentences (even if there had been a noun in it)
this would depend on the gender of the cousin girl: ma cousine, boy: mon cousin
It depends on the subject. If you are talking to a girl, use "you" as feminine. If you are talking to a a male or both, you use the masculine
français(e) ------------------------- français (masculine) française (feminine) in french you pronounce words differently depending on if you're a boy or girl or speaking to a group of people
Ma petite amie is a French equivalent of 'my girl'. The feminine possessive 'ma' means 'my'. The feminine adjective 'petite' means 'little'. The feminine noun 'fille'means 'girl, daughter'. All together, they're pronounced 'mah puh-tee-tah-mee'.ma fille
no, i don't think any colour is defined as boy or girl, except for in french when you have masculine and feminine . other wise it would be sexist.
amigo - boy amiga- girl