A schoolbag is "un cartable" in French; cartable is a masculine noun.
"Sac l'école" is masculine in French. The word "sac" (bag) is masculine, so it determines the gender of the entire phrase.
Le means "The""Le" means "the" in French. It is used with masculine nouns; the corresponding feminine word "La."
If you mean hand bag (sac à main) it is masculin, if you mean just bag (sac) it is masculin too. There are no rules that I've ever heard of, and I've been in France since 1976, it all works by "sound", except for a few rules: abbreviations are always masculin (un PC, un IVG...)
a bag is 'un sac' in French.
You can use the word "popular" in its adjective form. For example, "This brand of school bag is popular in our school."
"Sac l'école" is masculine in French. The word "sac" (bag) is masculine, so it determines the gender of the entire phrase.
A handbag is "un sac", which is masculine. I'm not sure what you mean by asking how to express it in the feminine.
Feminine items in French which belong in a school bag include "une calculatrice" (calculator), "une gomme" (eraser), and "une feuille de papier" (a sheet of paper).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female.The noun bag is a word for something that has no gender, bag is a neuter noun.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female.The noun bag is a word for something that has no gender, bag is a neuter noun.
Either. It stays the same for both masculine and feminine words. The only time you add an agreement is if the word is plural. Here you add just an "s", whether the word is masculine plural, or feminine plural. E.g. la table rouge - the red table le sac rouge - the red bag les livres rouges (masculine plural) - the red books les fleurs rouges (feminine plural) - the red flowers Apologies for the lame examples. I picked the first things I could see in my living room...
bag is : un sac
A school bag is 'un cartable' in French. Another term also in use is 'un sac d'école'.
Le means "The""Le" means "the" in French. It is used with masculine nouns; the corresponding feminine word "La."
un cartable
If you mean hand bag (sac à main) it is masculin, if you mean just bag (sac) it is masculin too. There are no rules that I've ever heard of, and I've been in France since 1976, it all works by "sound", except for a few rules: abbreviations are always masculin (un PC, un IVG...)
school binder = cartable (french Canadian) or classeur (french European) *classeur = filing cabinet in French Canadian *cartable = a kind of school bag in French European