The answer is butch.
It's five letters, ending in H. Butch refers to a male who appears very muscly.
Vilk- : the stem meaning wolf, -el- : suffix, meaning small, -is : ending meaning masculine gender.
A Masculine Ending has 186 pages.
A Masculine Ending was created on 1987-04-27.
Feminine, words ending with A tend to be Fem and words ending with O tend to be Mas.
There is no such word in Latin.There is a word aqua, meaning water, which is a feminine noun - as are almost all nouns ending in "-a".
The second declension vocative ending for the masculine singular is '-e'. For the masculine plural and neuter singular and plural, the vocative ending is the same as the nominative ending.
"Ainé" is an adjective, meaning 'older'. Adjectives are supposed to be of the same 'gender' (masculine or feminine) that the word they qualify. In "frère ainé", "frère" is a masculine noun meaning brother, so the adjective is masculine. In "soeur ainée", "soeur" is feminine, so "ainée" takes the mark of the feminine.
If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.If you mean "us" at the end of Roman names, no. The "us" is the Latin masculine singular ending for a name.
In French, the gender of a noun is typically assigned based on its ending. "Pupitre" ends in -tre, which is a common masculine noun ending. Therefore, "pupitre" is classified as a masculine word in French.
In French, the word "douce" is feminine. This can be determined by looking at the ending of the word, with the "e" at the end indicating it is feminine. In French, nouns and adjectives have gender, with feminine words typically ending in "e" and masculine words often ending in consonants.
In French, "cole" is feminine. The word "cole" means "school" in English. However, in general, gender in French is not determined by the meaning of the word, but rather by the noun's ending or other grammatical factors.
In French, the word "biscuits" is masculine. This is because it is preceded by the masculine article "les." In general, nouns ending in -s in French are typically masculine.