The word "gorgeous" is considered gender-neutral; it can describe anyone, regardless of gender. While it may be more commonly used to describe women in certain contexts, it is also perfectly acceptable to use it for men, places, or objects. Language is fluid, and the application of adjectives can vary based on societal norms and personal expression.
a widower is translated 'un veuf' in French. This is a masculine noun.
The word "ecole" is feminine in French.
faminine
The French word "yeux," meaning "eyes," is masculine plural. The singular form is "œil," which is also masculine. Therefore, when referring to "yeux," it is used with masculine articles and adjectives.
The thing doing the erasing (ie eraser) is feminine (la gomme). The thing which was erased (ie erasure) has two forms--one masculine and one feminine.
Brinjal or Aubergine in French is feminine
an eraser is a female or in other words a faminine
The question is vague, since there are in fact six forms of the word "the" in German: der, die, das, dem, den, des. Which form is used is not enough, in itself, to denote gender, since the tense (nominative, dative, accusative, genitive) also matters.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. A male goat is a buck or a billy. A female goat is a doe or a nanny.
Bella in the feminine and bello in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "beautiful".Specifically, the word is an adjective in its singular form. It means "beautiful, gorgeous, handsome". The pronunciation will be "BEL-la" in the feminine and "BEL-lo" in the masculine.
A male bovine is a bull, and a female is a cow. A male peafowl is called a peacock, and a female is a peahen.
its feminine " la" if feminine and "le" is masculine and "l" is a vowel like "l ecole