They could end in the letter "e" like for example estudiante. It may also end in "a" sometimes, like for example deportista. It applies for both feminine ans masculine.
There is no definite answer to this question as it depends on how you count and categorize words. However, in Spanish, there are some noun endings that are typically masculine or feminine, but overall the language has a balance of masculine and feminine words.
In Spanish, "el" is the masculine definite article used before masculine singular nouns, while "la" is the feminine definite article used before feminine singular nouns. These articles are used to indicate the gender of the noun.
The derivation of the gender of the various nouns may go back to earlier languages (Sanskrit?) and how the thing/noun was perceived in that language's culture. Masculine and feminine nouns are not unique to Spanish or to Latin-based languages for that matter. Germanic and Semitic languages also have masculine/feminine nouns. To determine if a noun is masculine or feminine in Spanish, you usually check its final letter. Feminine nouns end in 'a,'while masculine nouns end in 'o.' However, there are some masculine nouns of primarily Greek origin which end in 'a,'e.g., el tema, el idioma
The French have feminine and masculine words for African: africain (noun or adjective, masculine) and africaine (noun or adjective, feminine).
In French, the word "douce" is feminine. This can be determined by looking at the ending of the word, with the "e" at the end indicating it is feminine. In French, nouns and adjectives have gender, with feminine words typically ending in "e" and masculine words often ending in consonants.
There is no definite answer to this question as it depends on how you count and categorize words. However, in Spanish, there are some noun endings that are typically masculine or feminine, but overall the language has a balance of masculine and feminine words.
Feminine, words ending with A tend to be Fem and words ending with O tend to be Mas.
Semena is not a Spanish word. The Spanish words "semana" (week) and "semilla" (seed) are both feminine. The Spanish word "semen" (semen) is masculine.
The Spanish word "al" is masculine. It is a combination of the words "a" (to, at) + "el" (the, masc. sing.).
To say 'salty' in Spanish, you would say 'salado' for masculine words and 'salada' for feminine words.
All words that end in -ion in Spanish have an accent on the o in the singular (but not the plural) and are feminine.
Only 'el' is masculine and singular. 'La' is singular, but feminine; the others are both plurals, masculine and feminine respectively.
In Spanish, "el" is the masculine definite article used before masculine singular nouns, while "la" is the feminine definite article used before feminine singular nouns. These articles are used to indicate the gender of the noun.
English does not have masculine or feminine genders for words.
The derivation of the gender of the various nouns may go back to earlier languages (Sanskrit?) and how the thing/noun was perceived in that language's culture. Masculine and feminine nouns are not unique to Spanish or to Latin-based languages for that matter. Germanic and Semitic languages also have masculine/feminine nouns. To determine if a noun is masculine or feminine in Spanish, you usually check its final letter. Feminine nouns end in 'a,'while masculine nouns end in 'o.' However, there are some masculine nouns of primarily Greek origin which end in 'a,'e.g., el tema, el idioma
Not a lot! It's four unconnected words. una = 'a' (feminine) nostro ('nuestro' in Spanish) = 'our(s)' (masculine) vostro ('vuestro' in Spanish) = 'your(s)' (informal, plural, masculine) esta = this (feminine), but if it has an accent over the 'a', it means 'is'.
The word for "these" in Spanish depends on if you are talking about "feminine" or "masculine" objects. For feminine objects, the word is "estas." It is pronounced, "EH-stahs." For masculine objects, the word is "estos." It is pronounced, "EH-stose." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.