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.
The Spanish word for "book" is "libro", and it is masculine.
maculine
yes
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
it is masculine so El
Masculine!! You can say "el papel", but not "la papel"
is avril masculine or feminine?
Masculine. El martes.
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
it is masculine so El
Masculine!! You can say "el papel", but not "la papel"
is avril masculine or feminine?
Masculine. El martes.
"el" is "the" in spanish ---- el (singular)(masculine), la (feminine), los (plural) (masculine), las (feminine) el libro: the book la mesa: the table los libros: the books las mesas: the tables These are just Spanish and only a few examples of how they are used. I'm not sure if that was what you were asking for, but, el, la, los, and las mean "the", but note the differences.
Since you are lacking punctuation, it is a little hard. "Sí, tengo el libro" would mean 'yes, I have the book' "Si tengo el libro" would mean 'If I have the book...." Not only that, but "la libro" needs to be "el libro" because Libro is a masculine noun.
Most adjectives in Spanish can be either feminine or masculine depending on the genre of the accompanying noun. "Favourite" is "favorito" in Spanish. So, if you put a masculine noun before like "libro" (book), then it's masculine: Mi libro favorito (my favourite book) but if the noun is feminine like "comida" then you have to use the feminine form: Mi comida favorita (my favourite food)
Masculine: El corrector
El viento (the wind) is masculine
pasaporte is masculine. "El pasaporte"
el nacho because nacho is masculine and la is feminine but el is masculine