-eau, for example le bateau (the boat), le manteau (the coat), le chapeau (the hat), l'oiseau (the bird). The one exception is l'eau (water), which is feminine.
The reason for the gender of a French word is often etymological. That's the case with "poisson", which comes from the Latin "piscis", which was masculine. I don't remember off the top of my head why "boisson" is feminine, but most nouns that end in "-son" are feminine, so "poisson" is the exception.
No - "viande" and "carotte" are feminine nouns so they would be "la viande" and "la carotte". "Poulet" is masculine so it is the only one of the three that can follow "le "
Salad is la salade in French, a feminine noun.
Nouns that refer to either a male or a female are said to be of the common gender. Nouns like baby, parent, student, cook, and fish are examples of common gender nouns. They can refer to either the male or female gender.
The word for cheese is a masculine noun: le fromage. Because fromage is masculine, masculine articles must be used with it, and here, it is used with
It would be "la pomme" though, because it's a feminine noun. Its pretty easy to distinguish between la and la. I guess they were kinda smart in doing this. Writing le pomme should make you realise you are wrong and then write the correct one le pain.
More French words for dessert. le dessert noun. sweet. entremet.
The first records of the word legume in English come from around the 1600s. It comes from the French version of the word, légume, meaning “vegetable.” It ultimately derives from the Latin legūmen, meaning “bean,” from the Latin verb legere, meaning “to pick (a crop).”
The gender of riz is masculine.
1 : the fruit or seed of leguminous plants (as peas or beans) used for food. 2 : any plant of the family Leguminosae.
Vetements (French)
| Question | Answer |
|---|
| Casquette | (Feminine) Cap |
| Bottes | (Plural, Feminine) Boots |
| Ceinture | (Feminine) Belt |
| Maillot de bain | (Masculine) Bathing suit |
Jean is a common female given name in English-speaking countries. It is the Scottish form of Jane (and is sometimes pronounced that way). It is sometimes spelled Jeaine. It is the equivalent of Johanna, Joanna, Joanne, Jeanne, Jana, and Joan.
A blouson or blouse jacket is a jacket that is drawn tight at the waist, causing it to blouse out and hang over the waistband. Some of them have a hood. It takes most of its modern traits from the American flight jacket and police blouson.