The feminine form of "uncle" is "aunt." An aunt is the sister of one's parent or the wife of one's uncle. The term is commonly used to refer to female relatives in a broader sense as well.
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The feminine form is materteral, referring to an aunt. Avuncular refers to an uncle, that which is like an uncle.
Guessing you mean the wife/sister of a great uncle, which would be great auntie.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'uncle' is a singularnoun for a male relative.(Although your uncle himself is, probably, masculine.)The corresponding singular noun for a female relative is aunt.
The word "tante" is feminine in French, meaning "aunt." It is used to refer to a female relative, specifically the sister of one's parent. The masculine equivalent is "oncle," which means "uncle."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The gender specific noun for the brother of your mother or father is uncle.The gender specific noun for the sister of your mother or father is aunt.
Unlike other Indo-European linguistic branches (Italian, Spanish, Russian, Hindi, etc.) English does not have masculine and feminine words. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: man, woman mother, father uncle, aunt girl, boy husband, wife boar, sow doe, buck bull, cow hen, rooster king, queen sister, brother son, daughter
Zia e zio is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "aunt and uncle."Specifically, the feminine noun zia means "aunt." The conjunction e means "and." The masculine noun ziomeans "uncle."The pronunciation is 'TSEE-ah eh TSEE-oh."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The gender specific noun for the sister of your parent is aunt.The gender specific noun for the brother of your parent is uncle.
"Un parent" (masculine noun). There is a derived feminine noun, "une parente" but that has a different meaning (a relative). The plural is "des parents" (still masculine - French nouns don't change gender when pluralized)
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.