ess.
Either. It stays the same for both masculine and feminine words. The only time you add an agreement is if the word is plural. Here you add just an "s", whether the word is masculine plural, or feminine plural. E.g. la table rouge - the red table le sac rouge - the red bag les livres rouges (masculine plural) - the red books les fleurs rouges (feminine plural) - the red flowers Apologies for the lame examples. I picked the first things I could see in my living room...
It's "rouges"... to make a word masculine plural you simply add an s
It is neither. Une petite is feminine because you have to add an e on the end of your adjective. Un petit would be masculine because there is no e on the end. Yu can't have une petit as it is grammatically incorrect. Either they are masculine or feminine, they can't be both.
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Adjectives don't usually carry gender, just nouns. Noir is an adjective, so it isn't inherently either; it is neutral. But you would add an e (noire) if pairing with a feminine noun.
Some examples are "fry" becomes "fries," "study" becomes "studies," and "cry" becomes "cries." These words follow the rule of changing the 'y' to 'i' and adding 'es' when making them plural or third person singular.
For the most part no, but some do. Here is an example: change-changing.
Yes, in French, the adjective is modified by adding an "e" at the end to match the noun when it is feminine. For example, "grand" (big) becomes "grande" when describing a feminine noun like "voiture" (car).
Some words end in a consonant + y. To make them plural, change y to i and add es. Candy -> Candies
you need to double the consonant and add er
The plural of infirmity is infirmities. For most words ending in y, change it to i and add es.
Either. It stays the same for both masculine and feminine words. The only time you add an agreement is if the word is plural. Here you add just an "s", whether the word is masculine plural, or feminine plural. E.g. la table rouge - the red table le sac rouge - the red bag les livres rouges (masculine plural) - the red books les fleurs rouges (feminine plural) - the red flowers Apologies for the lame examples. I picked the first things I could see in my living room...
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It's "rouges"... to make a word masculine plural you simply add an s
your mom your dad your bro your sis
la couleur - the colorles couleurs - the colorsThe following is organized like this: English form - French masculine form (add for feminine form) (add for plural form).red - rouge(s)orange - orange*yellow - jaune(s)green - vert(e)(s)blue - bleu(e)(s)purple - violet(te)(s)pink - rose(s)white - blanc(he)(s)gray - gris(e)(s)**black - noir(e)(s)brown - marron**Never change form.**Don't add an "s" for the masculine plural form.Other notes:You usually don't add an "e" to a masculine adjective that already ends in an "e" to make it feminine.If an adjective describes both males and females, always use the masculine plural form.The final consonant sound is pronounced in the feminine forms but not the masculine forms.