The word "laboratory" is typically considered masculine in languages with gendered nouns, such as French ("le laboratoire") or Spanish ("el laboratorio"). However, in English, nouns do not have grammatical gender, so "laboratory" is gender-neutral. Therefore, its classification as masculine or feminine depends on the language context.
"Fields" is neither masculine nor feminine. There is no masculine or feminine form.
The term "hamster" does not have a specific feminine or masculine form. It is a unisex noun that refers to both male and female hamsters.
Masculine: tom Feminine: molly, queen, pussy
In French, the word "Kenya" is masculine. Therefore, you would say "le Kenya" when referring to the country. French nouns are categorized as either masculine or feminine, and geographic names often follow specific conventions.
Buck is the masculine........a male deer (the female is a doe).
Feminine
its masculine no doubt
feminine
masculine
Masculine
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
Une école feminine
it is masculine so El
directeur → masculine directrice→ feminine
Masculine is the opposite of feminine.
masculine
feminine