It is masculine.
To tell if it is masculine or feminine look at the last letter.
If it ends in 'O' then it is masculine.
If it ends in 'A' then it is feminine.
This is not always true but mostly it is.
No. Nor is it feminine, either. It is the infinitive of a verb (= to travel), which doesn't have masculine and feminine in Spanish.
Feminine: La costumbre
"Calles" is Spanish for "streets", and it is feminine. It is pronounced "KI-yase". Please see the Related link below for confirmation of the translation.
The Spanish word "puertas" is feminine, and plural.
Masculine Singular: Ese Feminine Singular: Esa Masculine Plural: Esos Feminine Plural: Esas
It's masculine - "el dinero"
it is feminine because spanish word that ends with a "na" or just a "a" is feminine. if its masculine it ends with a "o"
The word "universidad" is feminine in Spanish.
The Spanish word "castillo" is masculine.
The Spanish word "cielo" is masculine.
The Spanish word "salón" is masculine.
The word "mesa" in Spanish is feminine.
el teclado(masculine)
The Spanish word for scissors, "tijeras," is feminine.
Revista is feminine.
Masculine. Normally, nouns that end in O in Spanish are masculine.
Brazo means arm in Spanish. El brazo is masculine, la brazo is feminine.