You can say, 'Sun is a masculine gender and moon is a feminine gender.', however, in English this is not true. English has no gender for nouns, all nouns are neutral and take a neutral verbs.
there is no feminine verion of 'mon pays' (my country). Not all nouns have masculine or feminine versions, so la lune (the moon) is always feminine, le soleil (the sun) is always masculine.
A feminine noun before a masculine prepositional phrase describes the gender of the French phrase lunettes de soleil. The feminine plural noun lunettes means "glasses" and the masculine possessive singular phrase de soleil "of (the) sun," for a translation as "sunglasses" in English. The pronunciation will be "lyoo-net so-ley" in Alsatian French.
Stanza del sole is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "sun room." The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun, preposition, and masculine singular noun -- which translate literally into English as "room of the sun" -- will be "STAN-tsa del SO-ley" in Italian.
Luna e sole is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "moon and sun." The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun, conjunction, and masculine singular noun will be "LOO-na ey SO-ley" in Italian.
"Maison du soleil" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "House of the sun."Specifically, the feminine noun "maison" means "house." The word "du" combines the preposition "de" and the masculine singular definite article "le" to mean "of the." The masculine noun "soleil" means "sun."The pronunciation is "meh-zoh dyoo soh-leh."
Luce del sole is an Italian equivalent of the English word "sunshine." The feminine singular noun (which may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la for "the"), combination preposition with masculine singular definite article, and masculine singular noun translate literally as "light of the sun." The pronunciation will be "LOO-tchey del SO-ley" in Italian.
"Giorno" is an Italian equivalent of "day."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its masculine singular definite article is "il" ("the"). Its masculine singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "DJOHR-noh."
Sole is an Italian equivalent of the English word "sun." The masculine singular noun may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the") or the indefinite un, uno ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "SO-ley" in Italian.
"le masculin" is a grammatical gender for nouns in French. Most nouns are of either masculine or feminine gender, some other accomodate both genders. There is no 'neutral' gender, as exist in other languages.example: la lune (the moon) is considered feminine.le soleil (the sun) is considered masculine.un professeur (a teacher) or une professeur could be of either gender.
Molto sole is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "a lot of sun." The masculine singular adjective and noun also may be rendered into English as "much sun." The pronunciation will be "MOL-to SO-ley" in Italian.
"My beautiful sun's ray" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Mon beau rai de soleil.Specifically, the masculine possessive adjective mon is "my". The masculine adjective beau means "beautiful". The masculine noun rai means "ray". The preposition de means "of". The masculine noun soleiltranslates as "sun".The pronunciation will be "moh boh reh duh soh-leh" in French.