mmmmm
Feminine.
piano.
piano
This is difficult to answer because "upright piano" is a standard and well-defined term "Student piano" is not. In 99% of cases, a "student" piano IS an upright piano.
A person who tunes a piano is a Piano Tuner. If he/she is qualified to make repairs, the title is Piano Technician.
Un piano (masculine noun)
The piano itself is an inanimate object and does not possess gender. However, in some languages, musical instruments may be assigned a gender classification based on grammatical rules. In English, the piano is typically referred to as a neutral object, while in languages like French or Spanish, it may be classified as feminine or masculine depending on the specific term used.
In French, the word for piano is masculine: "le piano." This is indicated by the use of the definite article "le," which is used for masculine nouns. As a result, any adjectives or verbs used with "piano" will also need to agree in gender, reflecting its masculine form.
In French, the word "piano" is masculine. It is used with the masculine article "le," so you would say "le piano." The gender of nouns in French can sometimes be arbitrary and does not necessarily reflect any inherent characteristics of the object itself.
Fuga, piano, rampa, squadriglia, traiettoria, and volo are Italian equivalents of the English word "flight."Specifically, the feminine noun fuga is "escape, flight." The masculine noun piano means "flight, floor, level" in or or a building. The feminine noun rampa means "flight" of stairs. The feminine noun squadriglia means "flight" squadron of planes. The feminine noun traiettoria means "flight" path. The masculine noun volo translates as "flight" of a plane.The respective pronunciations will be "FOO-ga," "PYA-no," "RAM-pa," skwa-DREE-lya," TRA-yet-TO-rya," and "VO-lo" in Italian.
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.
feminine, i believe
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
Feminine
the feminine of he is she
le piano I play the piano = Je joue du piano