masculine
Nouns in English do not normally have masculine and feminine forms, unless they are referring to a person or an animal or a ship. Book is just book.
"Un ordinateur" is a masculine noun in French.
Une tante mean an aunt, You can use "tante" (slang, offensive) for a gay man Tante is aunt in Dutch, if you were wondering what language it is.
"my aunt's name is XXX" is "ma tante s'appelle XXX".
Aunt is "tante" (fem.) in French.
The word "bandera" is feminine in Spanish.
In Spanish, "sacapuntas" is a masculine noun.
Nothing. la mer is definitely feminine. although, there is L'océan (the ocean) which is masculine
In French, "Angleterre" (England) is feminine. Therefore, it is used with the feminine article "la" as in "la Angleterre." When referring to England in a sentence, you would use feminine adjectives and pronouns.
hey fell for someone- haheho Me enamore del (maculine) de ella ( feminine)
The word "tante" is feminine in French, meaning "aunt." It is used to refer to a female relative, specifically the sister of one's parent. The masculine equivalent is "oncle," which means "uncle."
it's feminine - uneRuler in french is a feminine word
I should hope that "Aunt Isabel" is a woman...
Nouns in English do not normally have masculine and feminine forms, unless they are referring to a person or an animal or a ship. Book is just book.
Die is "the" in the feminine form. If you were saying The aunt, you would say- Die Tante
Tante belle cose! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Many beautiful things!"Specifically, the feminine adjective tante is "many, so many." The feminine adjective belle means "beautiful." The feminine noun cose translates as "things."The pronunciation will be "TAN-tey BEL-ley KO-sey" in Italian.
tiger