"Grand" is a gender-neutral term in English and does not have a specific masculine or feminine form. It can be used to describe something impressive or large.
In English, "mere" does not have a gender or masculine/feminine form as it is an adjective used to describe something as being small, slight, or minimal.
You could describe something (if it's masculine) as tardus verus or lentus verus, very slow.As an adverb, it would be lentissime, most slowly.
In French, if you want to describe your bedroom as masculine, you could say "chambre masculine," and if you want to describe it as feminine, you could say "chambre féminine."
The masculine singular form for "yellow" in Spanish is "amarillo." It is used to describe masculine nouns, while the feminine form is "amarilla" for feminine nouns. For example, you would say "el coche amarillo" (the yellow car) for a masculine noun.
Belief of something.
To exempt/omit something.
A need is something that is required for survival.
A thermos
Nouns cannot describe anything. Adjectives would be words that describe something. The word "tragic" would be the adjective form to describe a tragedy.
You would describe the criminal, because describe means to give a description. Inscribe means to write or carve on something
The term "masculine niece" is not commonly used or recognized in standard language. Typically, a niece is the daughter of one's sibling, and gender descriptors like "masculine" do not apply to her. If the term is meant to describe a niece who identifies or presents in a masculine way, it would be more appropriate to refer to her gender identity or expression directly.