The term "bull" is typically considered masculine, as it refers specifically to a male animal of certain species, such as cattle. In contrast, the female counterpart is called a "cow." In terms of grammatical gender, "bull" is often treated as a masculine noun in languages that have gendered nouns.
The word elephant is neither masculine nor feminine. It is non-gender specific. Note that unlike many other languages, English does not assign have masculine, feminine, and neuter articles so nouns typically have no gender associate - with the obvious exception of nouns referring to gender like girl, boy, bull, cow, buck, doe, etc.
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French, it is masculine (le requin). In Spanish, it is masculine (el tiburón). In Arabic, it is masculine (سمك القرش). In German, it is feminine (das haie).
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female.The noun 'bull' is the gender specific noun for a male bovine.
A male bovine is a bull, and a female is a cow. A male peafowl is called a peacock, and a female is a peahen.
The word "zoo" is a neuter noun in English, meaning it does not have a gender classification like masculine or feminine. In languages with gendered nouns, such as Spanish or French, "zoo" may be classified differently; for example, in French, it is masculine ("le zoo"). However, in standard English usage, it is considered neutral.
feminine
Masculine
The word "Lied" in German is neuter.
it is das Ei (neuter)
In Hindi, the word "hind" doesn't have a concept of masculine or feminine as it is a neuter noun.
Wall Street is neither feminine nor masculine. It's Neuter Gender.
In German, the word for apple is "der Apfel," which is masculine. Therefore, it takes masculine articles and adjectives. In terms of grammatical gender, nouns in German can be masculine, feminine, or neuter, and "Apfel" falls into the masculine category.
Idem - masculine/neuter Eadem - feminine
femine gender
It depends on the subject. If you are talking to a girl, use "you" as feminine. If you are talking to a a male or both, you use the masculine
Durus, if masculine; dura, if feminine; durum, if neuter.
Celer (masculine); celeris (feminine); celere (neuter).