In French, the word "film" is masculine. It is preceded by the masculine article "le," as in "le film." This classification of nouns is a grammatical feature of the French language, where all nouns are assigned a gender, either masculine or feminine.
La Finlande (feminine, singular name)
masculine un film (singular) - des films (plural) J'ai été voir un bon film hier au cinéma. J'ai vu de bons films dans ma vie.
Le français (masculine), la française(feminine)
je suis en colère is neither feminine nor masculine. It means 'I am angry'. The fact this is a boy - or a girl - speaking would not turn the phrase into masculine or feminine. Only nouns and the related adjectives have a gender in French, but not the sentences (even if there had been a noun in it)
The French word "cinéma" is masculine. In French, it is used with the masculine definite article "le," so you would say "le cinéma." This gender classification applies to all related terms and adjectives as well.
The abbreviation DVD is considered masculine in French. ("un DVD")
Feminine
masculine
La salade is feminine
masculine
feminine
Feminine
In French the country Mali is masculine.
In French, "croissant" is a masculine noun.
balle is feminine in french / ballon is masculine
It's masculine. Beef in French is le boeuf.
The word "disques" is masculine in French.