its not masculine or feminime
Its masculine: un chaton - "un" is masculine
In French, "bananes" is feminine. It is "les bananes" for plural.
In the French language, the word for France ("la France") is feminine.
"Jeszcze tylko jeden(masculine)/jedna(feminime)".
Pequeño or pequeña, depending on whether the subject is masculine of feminime.
The French word portable is masculine and may be used as follows: J'utilise un portable ("I use a notebook").
If object is: masculine - sing. "użyteczny", plur. "użyteczni"; feminime - sing. "użyteczna", plur. "użyteczne"; neuter (universal) - "użyteczne".
The word "portable" is masculine in French, as it is derived from the masculine noun "port" (meaning "to carry"). In French, adjectives like "portable" agree in gender and number with the nouns they modify, so it would be used with masculine nouns. In English, "portable" does not have a gender.
yes
hair b poo
Well, darling, in French, the word "notebook" is masculine. So, if you want to refer to a notebook in French, you would say "un cahier" which means "a notebook" in English. Just remember, whether it's masculine or feminine, a notebook is always there to jot down your thoughts and dreams, regardless of its gender.