There is NO gender in the English noun. Or in other words: All English nouns are of the same gender. Grammatical gender has nothing to do with sex.
a) Masculine Gender for words representing males: boy, man, duke, son.
b) Feminine Gender for words representing females: girl, woman, mother.
c) Neuter Gender for inanimate objects: table, book, umbrella, door.
d) Common Gender for either sex: student, reader, cousin, friend.
There is no gender in the English noun.
There are four genders of nouns: 1-gender specific nouns for a male 2-gender specific nouns for a female 3-common gender nouns,; nouns that can be a male or a female 4-neuter nouns; nouns for things that have no gender
vixen
Chinese and Japanese
Not in English. There is no gender in the English noun.
In English, the genders of nouns are:gender specific nouns for a male (son, brother, king, stallion)gender specific nouns of a female (mother, aunt, queen, hen)common gender nouns (parent, neighbor, driver, dentist)neuter nouns (house, butter, ocean, car)More examples: Male: father, boy, uncle, rooster, bull, duke, manFemale: girl, sister, cow, duchess, woman, mare, daughterCommon gender: teacher, cousin, cat, judge, friend, customer, pilotNeuter: pillow, pencil, table, building, hat, island, oxygen
In many languages, nouns are categorized by gender (masculine, feminine, neuter). For example, in Spanish, "la mesa" (the table) is feminine, "el libro" (the book) is masculine, and "el agua" (the water) is neuter. In German, "der Tisch" (the table) is masculine, "die TΓΌr" (the door) is feminine, and "das Haus" (the house) is neuter.
Most nouns in the English language, including education, do not have genders.
In English, we don't have separate genders for nouns like they do in French, Italian, Spanish, etc.They are genderless as they are all usually preceded by a, an, the or a number.
Four nouns (synonyms) for the noun dog are:caninepetcompanionhunter
Four nouns for dad: father, grandfather, man, parent. Four nouns for son: boy, child, offspring, person.
Four nouns (synonyms) for Abraham Lincoln are:manhusbandfathercitizen
se or sa depending if the object is feminine or masculine. English doesn't differentiate between non-animal nouns, but french nouns do.