Gender is not a characteristic of English nouns. There are no words that are technically masculine or feminine in English, in a grammatical sense. There are words that name things used always or more often by women, and other words that are conterparts for men. But gender of nouns, in languages that use gender, is not strictly about men and women. it is about how different groups of words are handled with regard to affixes that attach to them, and how they might interact with other words in a sentence. Since English is virtually free of inflection, noun gender is meaningless.
La salade is feminine
The word "chaussures" is feminine in French.
it's a masculine word.
The word "disques" is masculine in French.
The word "universidad" is feminine in Spanish.
The word "cafeteria" in French is feminine.
it is masculine
Un ami is masculine, and une amie is feminine.
penguin is a masculine word and it is un manchot. there is no feminine form of that word because it is masculine.
feminine la photo
feminine
Masculine