The masculine form of "mother" is "father." While "mother" refers to a female parent, "father" denotes a male parent. Both terms are used to describe the roles and relationships within a family.
fATHER MOTHER
a boy excessively attached to his mother; lacking normal masculine interests.
There is no masculine equivalent of Madonna since the Italian word refers to the mother of Jesus.
"Foster" is a verb or an adjective, English has no masculine or feminine forms for words, only nouns for gender. Foster mother OR foster father is as close as you'll get.
In English at least: Feminine would be: mother, mom, mommy, mama, ma Masculine would be: father, dad, daddy, papa, pa, pop Alternatively you could refer to a parental relationship as paternal (masculine) or maternal (feminine).
In the context of gender, "father" is associated with masculinity as it typically refers to a male parent. This reflects societal norms and traditional gender roles where fathers are expected to exhibit characteristics and behaviours considered masculine.
Unlike other Indo-European linguistic branches (Italian, Spanish, Russian, Hindi, etc.) English does not have masculine and feminine words. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. Some examples of gender specific nouns are: man, woman mother, father uncle, aunt girl, boy husband, wife boar, sow doe, buck bull, cow hen, rooster king, queen sister, brother son, daughter
Masculine
It is masculine.
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.
masculine
Masculine. Normally, nouns that end in O in Spanish are masculine.