It depends entirely on the language and, in a number of languages, the gender changes whether we are referring to a living chicken or "food-item" chicken, since those can be distinct words.
Chicken is "poulet" in French, which is a masculine noun.
Masculine is the opposite of feminine.
masculine ;)
The word "universidad" is feminine in Spanish.
La salade is feminine
Chicken is "poulet" in French, which is a masculine noun.
peacock
It is masculine. (un poulet)
Gallina bianca in the feminine and pollo bianco -- for the animal and the white sauced-served meal item -- in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "white chicken."Specifically, the feminine noun gallina and the masculine pollo respectively mean "female chicken" and "male chicken" (or chicken in general). The feminine adjective bianca and the masculine bianco translate as "white."The pronunciation will be "gal-LEE-na BYAN-ka" in the feminine and "POL-lo BYAN-ko" in the masculine.
Feminine
its masculine no doubt
feminine
Masculine
masculine
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
Une école feminine
it is masculine so El