masculine
feminine
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mer) In Spanish it is masculine (el mar) In Welsh it is masculine (y mor)
It is both masculine and feminine. :D
The French word acteur is masculine in gender. The masculine singular noun, whose feminine equivalent is actrice, means "actor" in English. The pronunciation will be "ak-tuhr" in the masculine and "ak-treess" in the feminine in French.
In the English language there are no masculine nor feminine forms. There are only gender-specific nouns for male or female animals. Heifer is a female noun for cattle (or bovines), specifically cattle or a bovine that is young and never gave birth to a calf.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female. The noun heifer is a word for a female, a cow over one year of age that has not yet produced a calf.
Feminine
Cow, first-calf heifer, bred heifer, heifer, heifer calf or spayed heifer. See the related question below.
its masculine no doubt
Masculine
feminine
masculine
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female. Since a bullock can refer to both a steer and a young bull, the female counterpart of a young bull would be a heifer. But for a steer, that would be a spayed heifer.
La pizarra is feminine, (el) is masculine, and (la) is feminine.
Une école feminine
it is masculine so El