In French, "chocolate" is considered masculine and is referred to as "le chocolat."
"pâté" is masculine in the French language.
"le français" is masculine. Actually, all language names I can think of are masculine in French.
No, it is feminine. Banana in French is une banane.
The French verb "cantiner" is not inherently feminine or masculine as verbs in French do not have gender. The gender distinction is typically associated with nouns and adjectives in the French language.
masculine
Chocolate is masculine. In french, chocolate is un / le chocolat
masculine
"pâté" is masculine in the French language.
"le français" is masculine. Actually, all language names I can think of are masculine in French.
Belle is a feminine adjective in French. The masculine is "beau".Belle is female in French language
No, it is feminine. Banana in French is une banane.
Feminine
Haricots are a variety of French beans. English language doesn't have masculine or feminine.
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mer) In Spanish it is masculine (el mar) In Welsh it is masculine (y mor)
The French verb "cantiner" is not inherently feminine or masculine as verbs in French do not have gender. The gender distinction is typically associated with nouns and adjectives in the French language.
masculine
In French, the English language is considered feminine, so you would use the feminine definite article "la" before it.