Yes, "fois" in French is feminine. The masculine form is "fois" (time), and the feminine form is "fois" (as in "une fois" - one time).
The gender of the French phrase une fois is feminine. The pronunciation of the feminine singular indefinite article and noun -- which literally translates as "a time" or "one time" -- will be "yoon fea" in French.
La prochaine fois Next time, I will be more careful. La prochaine fois, je serai plus prudent
In French, you can say "both A and B" as "à la fois A et B" or "à la fois A et B tous les deux."
masculine
No, in French, masculine is "masculin" and Swiss is "suisse."
The gender of the French phrase une fois is feminine. The pronunciation of the feminine singular indefinite article and noun -- which literally translates as "a time" or "one time" -- will be "yoon fea" in French.
deux fois pronounce it like this du fwa
deux fois deux"deux fois deux, quatre"
"Each time I feel happier" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Chaque fois je me sens plus heureux.Specifically, the feminine/masculine adjective chaque is "each". The feminine noun fois means "time". The personal pronoun jemeans "I". The reflexive pronoun me means "myself". The verb sens means "(I) am feeling, do feel, feel". The comparative plus means "more". The masculine adjective heureuxtranslates as "happy".The pronunciation will be "shahk fwah zhuh muh saw plyoo-zuh-ruh" in French.
La prochaine fois Next time, I will be more careful. La prochaine fois, je serai plus prudent
Chaque fois
Une fois.
In French, you can say "both A and B" as "à la fois A et B" or "à la fois A et B tous les deux."
une fois
chaque fois que
fois dangereuses
"Time" in French is spelled "temps."