The female of a tailor is often referred to as a "seamstress." While both terms describe individuals who sew and create garments, "tailor" can be gender-neutral or specifically male, whereas "seamstress" traditionally denotes a female who specializes in sewing. However, the term "tailor" is increasingly used for all genders in modern contexts.
Traditionally you would call them a Tailor. The female equivalent of this is a seamstress or dressmaker.
A sandwich maker.
There is no gender for the noun dressmaker or for the person who is a dressmaker, a dressmaker can be a male or a female.
Tailor"
The masculine gender of "tailor" is simply "tailor" itself, as the term is gender-neutral and can refer to both male and female individuals who sew and make clothing. In contexts where a distinction is necessary, one might use "male tailor" to specifically denote a man in that profession. Alternatively, "seamstress" is often used to refer to women who sew, although it specifically denotes a female.
A seamstress is a woman who makes clothes. Seamstress is the female definition of tailor. A lot of seamstresses make male clothes, too.
Yes ... it can be either sex. Both men and women can sew. =============================================== Second opinion: Seamstress is for female; tailor is for male. There are some archaic terms for a man who sews: seamster, sewer, sempster, sartor, modiste But you'll rarely these terms used nowadays, depending on local dialects. Tailor is now the generally preferred term.
The opposite gender of tailor in Hindi is "darzi" which means male tailor.
A tailor can make as much as a tailor can sew. If a tailor does not sew, then he/she will not make anything, including sewed products.
a tailor or seamstress
tailor :) that's a person who makes clothes
Andrew Johnson was a professional tailor and ran his own tailor shop.