The feminine version of a prince is called a princess.
Princess is the feminine form of prince (from Latin princeps, meaning principal citizen).
"Prince" is typically considered a masculine title or term, as it is traditionally used to refer to a male member of a royal family.
"Princess" is the feminine equivalent of "prince."princess
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a male is prince; the noun for a female is princess.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun for a female member of a royal family is princess.The corresponding noun for a male member of a royal family is prince.
Sarah means 'princess', the feminine form of prince. Prince in Sindarin (Elvish) is cund or cunn, and by adding a standard Elvish name ending (-iel,-ien, -wen), Sarah would be Cunniel, Cunnien, or Cundwen.
It's more complex. The majority of feminine words end with an 'e' but not all! And there are a lot of masculine words ending with an 'e' (musée, prince, genre, verre, microbe...). We add 'e' at the end of an adjective when it concerns a feminine noun.
A Crown Prince or Crown Princess is the heir or heiress apparent to the throne in a royal or imperial monarchy.Prince, from French "Prince" (itself from the Latin root princeps), is a general term for a monarch, for a member of a monarchs' or former monarch's family, and is a hereditary title in some members of Europe's highest nobility. The feminine equivalent is a princess.
"Maha" is a prefix meaning "great" or "highest," and "rajah" means "king." In Hindi, "maharajah" is a masculine title for a king or prince. The feminine counterpart would be "maharani," with "rani" meaning "queen."
He's always looked slightly feminine even in the days of Thriller, he was androgynous; having female and male characteristic's. Prince was exactly the same back in the 80's, so are some of the young stars of today.
feminine
"Espagne" is feminine in French.