The masculine form of heroine is hero. Heroine is just a woman superhero.
mon if the word is masculine singularma if the word is masculine singularmes if the word is masculine or feminine pluralBTW in french possessive adjectives are related to the possessed thing not to the one who is possessing:i.e.english: her dog, 'her' cause a woman is possessing a dogfrench: son chien, 'son': chien is masculine, not matter if a man or a woman is possessing it
The English language is not a romance language (meaning it does not have feminine and masculine words), and therefore "seas" is neither feminie nor masculine.
In French, "salaire" is a masculine noun. So, it is "le salaire" for a man's salary and "un salaire" for a woman's salary.
"Femme" in French is a feminine noun, as it refers to a woman.
Usual "feminine" refers to woman and "masculine" refers to men,
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, for example man and woman or buck and doe.
the person that plays coach Bieste ( its french) is a woman, Dot Marie Jones. She just looks a bit masculine.
Ellie Jackson is in fact a woman, the reason why she looks more masculine than feminine is because she is androgynous, meaning she looks neither more masculine or feminine.
Most of them like a man who is in shape, maybe even masculine. Sources: me ;-)
Soinster is a strictly feminine term indicating an unmarried woman (with negative connotations). An unmarried man is a bachelor, a term with no negative connotations.
The adjective, Italian, can be either masculine or feminine/ EX: La maison Italienne is feminine but Le village Italien is masculine. If you mean the country of Italy, it is spelled L'Italie and is feminine.