No. The word 'chien' is French for a 'male dog'. It therefore is a masculine gender noun. The French equivalent of a female dog is 'chienne', which is a feminine gender noun.
it is masculine as in un chien but there is a feminine : une chienne, for the female dog
La grenouille is a "female" gender word.There is no gender distinction for frogs, like cats or dogs, chat/chatte chien/chienne.
A dog is called 'un chien' in French.
dog I'd say: chien
The French word "chien" has one syllable.
it is masculine as in un chien but there is a feminine : une chienne, for the female dog
The common term is le chien. Technically, a female dog should be la chienne but the word has the same pejorative meaning as the English word for female dog (rhymes with "witch")
La grenouille is a "female" gender word.There is no gender distinction for frogs, like cats or dogs, chat/chatte chien/chienne.
``Chien`` or if you want it feminine ``chienne``
mon if the word is masculine singularma if the word is masculine singularmes if the word is masculine or feminine pluralBTW in french possessive adjectives are related to the possessed thing not to the one who is possessing:i.e.english: her dog, 'her' cause a woman is possessing a dogfrench: son chien, 'son': chien is masculine, not matter if a man or a woman is possessing it
'chien' means dog in English.
A dog is called 'un chien' in French.
dog I'd say: chien
The French word "chien" has one syllable.
The common term is le chien. Technically, a female dog should be la chienne but the word has the same pejorative meaning as the English word for female dog (rhymes with "witch")
chien
Two. It is pronounced like "she-en".