It is NOT masculine. It is feminine, that Amy person had it wrong
In French, "person" is a feminine noun. It is "la personne."
The word 'youth' is for masculine and feminine. Youth means ' how young a person is '.
Avez is a verb. It is neither masculine or feminine.
In French, "jean" is masculine when referring to denim pants and is a unisex name when referring to a person.
The pronoun "he" is in the grammatical third person. Grammatically speaking, he is the masculine third person singular. The third person plural is they, and the feminine third person singular is she.
It changes depending on what you say as the masculine and feminine article has to agree with the person. For example: My dad would be 'Mon père' which is masculine but my mum would be ma mère which is feminine.
Nouns in English do not normally have masculine and feminine forms, unless they are referring to a person or an animal or a ship. Book is just book.
"Du" is a masculine pronoun in German. It is used to refer to a singular, informal "you" when addressing a male person.
If the thing or person that's ready is feminine, the word is "lista." If the thing or person that's ready is masculine, the word is "listo." If the things or persons that are ready are feminine, the word is "listas." If the things or persons that are ready are masculine, the word is "listos." If the things or persons that are ready are both masculine and feminine, the word is "listos."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.An earl is a title for a male person, there is no equivalent for this title for a female.
Piccola nera in the feminine and piccolo nero in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "little black".Specifically, the feminine adjective nera and the masculine nero means "black". The feminine noun nera and the masculine nerorespectively translate as "black (female person)" and "black (male person)". The pronunciation will be "PEEK-ko-la NEY-ra" in the feminine and "PEEK-ko-lo NEY-ro" in the masculine.