Masculine: tom
Feminine: molly, queen, pussy
"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.
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).
In French, the word for nature is "nature," which is feminine (la nature). This classification is based on the grammatical gender system in the French language, where nouns are assigned either masculine or feminine forms. Thus, when discussing nature in French, one would use feminine articles and adjectives.
The word chat (cat) is masculine. Le chat (the cat), Un chat (a cat).
The word chat (cat) is masculine. Le chat (the cat), Un chat (a cat).
The word chat (cat) is masculine. Le chat (the cat), Un chat (a cat).
"Cat" in English is gatta in the feminine and gatto in the masculine.
Yes, "gato" is a masculine noun in Spanish, meaning "cat." It is used with masculine articles and adjectives, such as "el gato" (the cat). The feminine form is "gata."
le chat masculine la chatte feminine
Feminine
un chat - une chatte (and a kitten is - un chaton)
Il gatto or La gatta may be Italian equivalents of 'the cat'. In the word by word translation, the masculine definite article 'il' and the feminine definite article 'la'mean 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'gatto' means 'male cat'. The feminine gender noun 'gatta' means 'female cat'. The phrases are pronounced 'eel GAHT-toh' and 'lah GAHT-tah', respectively.
its masculine no doubt
feminine
Masculine