Le bus is masculine
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'bus matron' is a noun for a female.There is no equivalent noun for a male.The common gender noun is attendant (or bus attendant).
l'or is a masculine noun in French.
"Ville" is a feminine noun in French.
"Drôle" is an adjective in French, and adjectives do not have a gender. They take on the gender of the noun they are describing.
"un autobus" (masc) is the French noun for a bus (they do also say "bus")
Hope is l'espoir in French, which is a masculine noun.
The term "parasol" does not have a gender noun, as it is a common noun that refers to a type of umbrella designed to provide shade from the sun. In languages with grammatical gender, such as French or Spanish, the word for parasol may have a gender (e.g., "parasol" is masculine in French), but in English, nouns like "parasol" do not possess inherent gender.
where is the..."où est le ..." [+ masc. gender noun]"où est la ..." [+ fem. gender noun]
No. The word 'chien' is French for a 'male dog'. It therefore is a masculine gender noun. The French equivalent of a female dog is 'chienne', which is a feminine gender noun.
Pain (douleur) is a feminine noun.
'une école' is a feminine noun in French
Sudan is 'le Soudan' in French. This is a masculine noun.