Pain (douleur) is a feminine noun.
'la douleur' is French for 'pain'.
It depends on what you are asking. The French word "pain" meaning bread, is masculine in French: le pain / un pain. The English word "pain", translating to "douleur" is feminine in French: la douleur / une douleur
un bordel
Hope is l'espoir in French, which is a masculine noun.
i do not believe there is a gender for it but weak in french is faible.
The sensation of pain is different in every individual no matter the gender.
French toast is 'du pain perdu' in French.
The French word "the" is masculine and is translated as "le" or "l'".
'la douleur' is French for 'pain'.
In French, "walking" is a neutral term, so it is neither masculine nor feminine. The verb "marcher" is used regardless of the gender of the person walking.
The French word pain means 'bread' in English. The English word 'pain' is translated 'douleur' (feminine noun) in French.
dominiquise
"Ville" is a feminine noun in French.
In French, the word "racisme" is masculine.
In French, every noun has a gender, either masculine or feminine. Nationalities are no exception, and they must agree in gender with the person they describe. For example, "Français" is the masculine form for a French man, while "Française" is the feminine form for a French woman.
l'or is a masculine noun in French.
Simon Gaunt has written: 'Gender and Genre in Medieval French Literature (Cambridge Studies in French)' 'Gender and genre in medieval French literature'