all words except for proper nouns have a gender in french such as ( une file, or un garcon) but once you get into regular nouns there is no technical reason for its gender such as (une salad: salad, or un porte: door)
In French, the months of the year are all masculine gender.
The gender of the French word "l'enfant" is masculine.
"Drôle" is an adjective in French, and adjectives do not have a gender. They take on the gender of the noun they are describing.
The word for monkey is masculine. It is le singe.
In French, every noun has a gender, either masculine or feminine. Nationalities are no exception, and they must agree in gender with the person they describe. For example, "Français" is the masculine form for a French man, while "Française" is the feminine form for a French woman.
That is the female form of "disastrous". (In French, everything has gender.)
In French, the months of the year are all masculine gender.
C'est ma (+ feminine gender noun) means "it's my ..." in English.
un/uneActually, if you mean to put it in a sentence such as "she is A nice girl" then it's UNE or UN depending on the gender. if you just mean the letter a french "A" is the same as an English "A".d'un
The gender of the French word "l'enfant" is masculine.
"Drôle" is an adjective in French, and adjectives do not have a gender. They take on the gender of the noun they are describing.
The word for monkey is masculine. It is le singe.
dominiquise
Genre can have a few meanings depending on context. It can mean "type" as in what type of thing is this. It can mean "gender" in the linguistic sense as nouns in French have a "gender". La Chaise is a "female" word, le chapeau is a "male" word. Adverbs, verbs, will "change" to conform to the noun they represent. La chaise bleue, le chapeau bleu.
In French, every noun has a gender, either masculine or feminine. Nationalities are no exception, and they must agree in gender with the person they describe. For example, "Français" is the masculine form for a French man, while "Française" is the feminine form for a French woman.
"le masculin" is a grammatical gender for nouns in French. Most nouns are of either masculine or feminine gender, some other accomodate both genders. There is no 'neutral' gender, as exist in other languages.example: la lune (the moon) is considered feminine.le soleil (the sun) is considered masculine.un professeur (a teacher) or une professeur could be of either gender.
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.