In French, the word for "pencil case" is "trousse," and it is considered a feminine noun. Remember, language is like a beautiful painting with many colors and shades, each word having its own unique identity and beauty. Embrace the diversity of language and let your words flow like a gentle stream on a canvas.
(female)"The chair" in English is "la chaise" in French. However, "la chair" in French is "the flesh" in English. In either case, though, the French word is feminine.
in the feminine case: clara in the masculine case: clarus
The word 'une trousse' is a feminine gender noun. In school that would be a pencil case. It means little bag, case or kit. For example, une trousse a couture is a sewing kit: the preposition 'a' means 'to', and the noun 'couture' means 'sewing'.
Dans mon sac, il y a...(In my bag, there is...)MasculineUn sac - a bag Un crayon - a pencilUn taille-crayon - a pencil sharpenerUn portable - A mobile phoneUn stylo - A pen/ a ballpoint penUn livre - A textbookUn cahier - An exercise bookFeminineUne gomme - A rubber Une trousse - A pencil caseUne règle - A rulerUne calculatrice - A calculatorPluralDes ciseaux - Scissors Des feutres - Felt-tip pens
Vincenzo is an Italian equivalent of 'Vincent'. It's a masculine proper name that's pronounced 'veen-CHEHN-tsah'. Many names in Italian have feminine and masculine equivalents. In this case, the feminine form is 'Vincenza'.
feminine
masculine
Is the French word case feminine or muscling
une trousse verte
It can be either masculine - intelligent - or feminine - intelligente (as is the case the nearly all adjectives in French) and it can be plural as well.
(female)"The chair" in English is "la chaise" in French. However, "la chair" in French is "the flesh" in English. In either case, though, the French word is feminine.
The word "robes" becomes feminine in the case of a judge's attire and masculine in terms of dressing gowns when translated from English to French. The French equivalents will be robes(case 1) or peignoirs (example 2). The respective pronunciations will be "ruhb" and "peh-nwar" in French.
If you're talking about an object that is masculine (in case you don't know, objects are either feminine or masculine in french) you'll say "Celui-là" if it's feminine "celle-là"
Qu'elle... and Qu'il... are French equivalents of the incomplete English phrase "That it... ." Context makes clear whether "it" is feminine (case 1) or masculine (example 2) in gender. The respective pronunciations will be "kel" in the feminine and "keel" in the masculine in French.
the spelling for pencil case in french is "une trousse".
In French, the word for glue, "colle," is feminine. This can be determined by looking at the article that precedes it; for example, you would say "la colle" to mean "the glue." French nouns have grammatical gender, and in this case, "colle" is a feminine noun.
Feminine describes the gender of the French word corbeille. The feminine singular noun translates literally as "basket" and often as "recycle bin" or "trash" in English. The pronunciation will be "kor-bey" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.