Damsel is an obsolete or literary word for a young girl or woman, unmarried, usually in the juvenile or teenaged bracket. There was a poem by Christina Rosetti called (The Blessed Damsel) I wonder who it was about. By definition it could not be St. Mary as she is the Blessed Mother, and a damsel could not be married. My Guess it was Joan of Arc but I am not sure. A damsel is a young girl, Mademoiselle is a related, still current term for (miss) in French.
Grand (masculine) or grande (feminine) eg l'homme grand (the big man) la dame grande (the big woman)
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
yeux is masculine
kirah
Give me it. It, in this case, is masculine.
Grand (masculine) or grande (feminine) eg l'homme grand (the big man) la dame grande (the big woman)
An angel is "un ange" (masculine noun) in French. Ex: cette dame est un ange - that lady is an angel.
M ; Marquis / marquese F ; Marchioness. Also King/Queen Prince / Princess Duke/Duchess Viscount/Viscountess Lord/Lady Baron/Baroness Earl/Viscountess (NOT 'Earless'. ) 'Sir/Dame In this case ' The wife of a knight 'Sir', is titled 'Lady'. However, if the woman is promoted to this level of peerage in her own right, then she is a 'Dame'. Here husband remains as 'mister/Mr'.
beau (feminine belle; masculine before a vowel bel) Une belle dame un beau garçon Un bel homme
Masculine
'Dame' means lady or just dame.
Dame Judi Dench is in The Dame Busters, a British war film released in 1955.
It is masculine.
Notre Dame, IN
The word "jardin" is masculine in French.