The term "farmer" is gender-neutral and can refer to individuals of any gender who engage in farming. Therefore, there is no specific masculine form of the word; both men and women can be called farmers. In some contexts, people might use "male farmer" to specify gender, but "farmer" itself encompasses all genders.
Man or woman, a farmer is called a farmer.
Contadina in the feminine and contadino in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "peasant." The nouns have the above-mentioned historical meaning as well as the modern meaning of "farmer." The respective pronunciation will be "KON-ta-DEE-na" in the feminine and "KON-ta-DEE-no" in the masculine in Italian.
Masculine
It is masculine.
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.
masculine
aaron farmer, susan farmer, Larry farmer
Masculine. Normally, nouns that end in O in Spanish are masculine.
Feminine
Masculine
In French, "apricot" (abricot) is a masculine noun.
The proper name of a turkey farmer is farmer, or turkey farmer.