Gentlemen
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.
Masculine. Normally, nouns that end in O in Spanish are masculine.
In French, "apricot" (abricot) is a masculine noun.
"Bolígrafo" is masculine in Spanish.
"Senhoras" is the word for "ladies" in Portuguese.
No, gents is an abbreviation of gentlemen. Gentleman is the masculine of Lady
With a certain medical procedure and the proper hormone treatment they can even become men!
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The corresponding gender specific nouns for"lady" are "gentleman" (ladies and gentlemen) or "lord" (lord and lady) depending on context. Still another is "knight" (the knight and his lady).
they either have high testosterone levels naturally wich makes them appear somewhat masculine or are on synthetic male hormones.
Bon après-midi, Mesdames is a French equivalent of 'Good afternoon, Ladies'. The words in French are pronounced 'boh-nah-prEH-mee-dEE may-dahm'.In the word by word translation, the masculine adjective 'bon' means 'good'. The masculine gender noun 'après-midi' means 'after [the hour of] noon'. The feminine gender noun 'Mesdames' means 'women, ladies'.
Masculine
Citoyens is masculine and "all encompassing", meaning if there are both men and women. Citoyennes is the feminine form, when addressing only women. "Citoyens et Citoyennes" is the politically correct way to address all citizens in Canadian French. Sort of like in English saying "Ladies and Gentlemen".
It is masculine.
The possessive form for lady (singular) is lady's. The possessive form for ladies (plural) is ladies'.
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.
The plural form of the noun 'lady' is ladies.
masculine