Tout droit is a masculine, not a feminine, phrase in French. The adverb and masculine singular adjective translate into English as "straight ahead." The pronunciation will be "too dwa" in French.
The gender of the French phrase une fois is feminine. The pronunciation of the feminine singular indefinite article and noun -- which literally translates as "a time" or "one time" -- will be "yoon fea" in French.
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.
Masculine describes the gender of the French phrase des souliers. The plural phrase translates as "of the shoes" or "some slippers" in English. The pronunciation will be "dey soo-lyey" in Alsatian French.
Feminine describes the gender of the French phrase une règle. The feminine singular phrase translates as "a regulation," "a rule" or, in terms of the measuring instrument, "one ruler" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "yoon reg" in Alsatian French and "yoo-nuh reh-gluh" in Provençal French.
Tout droit is a masculine, not a feminine, phrase in French. The adverb and masculine singular adjective translate into English as "straight ahead." The pronunciation will be "too dwa" in French.
The gender of the French phrase une fois is feminine. The pronunciation of the feminine singular indefinite article and noun -- which literally translates as "a time" or "one time" -- will be "yoon fea" in French.
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.
Masculine describes the gender of the French phrase des souliers. The plural phrase translates as "of the shoes" or "some slippers" in English. The pronunciation will be "dey soo-lyey" in Alsatian French.
Feminine describes the gender of the French phrase une règle. The feminine singular phrase translates as "a regulation," "a rule" or, in terms of the measuring instrument, "one ruler" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "yoon reg" in Alsatian French and "yoo-nuh reh-gluh" in Provençal French.
"Sac l'école" is masculine in French. The word "sac" (bag) is masculine, so it determines the gender of the entire phrase.
No, une école is not a masculine phrase in French. The feminine singular cardinal number/indefinite article and noun translate literally into English as "a school" or "one school" according to context. The pronunciation will be "yoo-ney-kol" in French.
"Les artistes" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "The artists."Specifically, the feminine/masculine plurale definite article "les" means "the." The feminine/masculine noun "artistes" means "artists." The pronunciation is "leh-zahr-teest."
Bel avion is a masculine phrase in French. The masculine singular adjective and noun translate literally into English as "beautiful (handsome) aeroplane (aircraft, airplane, plane)." The pronunciation will be "beh-la-vyo" in French.
The French equivalent of the English phrase, they have. is: ils ont (masculine form) and, elles ont (feminine form).
Feminine is the gender of the French phrase pommes de terre. The pronunciation of the feminine plural noun followed by a possessive preposition and a feminine singular noun -- which translate literally as "apple of (the) earth" and loosely as "potatoes" -- will be "puhm duh tehr" in French.
"Trop strict" in the masculine and "Trop stricte" in the feminine are French equivalents of the English phrase "too strict."Specifically, the adverb "trop" means "too." The masculine adjective "strict" and the feminine "stricte" mean "strict." The pronunciation is "troh streekt."