In French, nothing at all; those are the only two alternatives. Everything has a gender. In many other languages, tere is also Neuter (=neither).
Piller is a verb, so it's neither feminine nor masculine!
Landowner is not gender specific, it is neither masculine nor feminine.
"Est" is a form of a verb in French. Nouns and adjectives can be masculine or feminine, but verbs are neither masculine nor feminine, and you could use them whatever is the gender of the subject:elle est jolie (she is pretty) - il est grand (he is tall).
In linguistics, nouns in French and Spanish have gender (masculine or feminine), but in English, there is no gender assigned to inanimate objects like bagels. So, a bagel is neither masculine nor feminine in English.
Hot is an adjective and therefore neither masculine nor feminine. The gender will be taken from the noun to which the adjective refers.
Neither masculine nor feminine.
"Fields" is neither masculine nor feminine. There is no masculine or feminine form.
Cousin is neither masculine nor feminine
Nouns in English are neither masculine nor feminine.
Bizarre is an adjective. It is neither masculine nor feminine.
The word 'deux' (two) is neither feminine nor masculine because it is not a noun.
Wall Street is neither feminine nor masculine. It's Neuter Gender.
Piller is a verb, so it's neither feminine nor masculine!
Papier is neither masculine nor feminine, rather it is plural.
much is translated 'beaucoup' in French. Beaucoup is an adverb and has no gender - it is neither masculine nor feminine.
Landowner is not gender specific, it is neither masculine nor feminine.
"Est" is a form of a verb in French. Nouns and adjectives can be masculine or feminine, but verbs are neither masculine nor feminine, and you could use them whatever is the gender of the subject:elle est jolie (she is pretty) - il est grand (he is tall).