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In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for a male or a female, such as male and female.

Some examples of gender nouns are:

  • mother and father
  • rooster and hen
  • woman and man
  • peacock and peahen
  • aunt and uncle
  • buck and doe
  • sister and brother
  • king and queen
  • girl and boy
  • son and daughter
  • nanny goat and billy goat
  • groom and bride
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Wiki User

11y ago
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Wiki User

8y ago

In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male and female.

Examples of gender specific nouns for a female are:

  • aunt
  • baroness
  • countess
  • cow
  • daughter
  • doe
  • empress
  • ewe
  • goddess
  • hen
  • heifer
  • lioness
  • madam (ma'am)
  • mare
  • mermaid
  • miss
  • mother
  • peahen
  • princess
  • queen
  • sister
  • sow
  • vixen
  • waitress
  • worker bee
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Wiki User

12y ago

In the English language, nouns do not have genders. Therefore there are no feminine words, nor any masculine nor neuter ones.

If you mean words that refer to female people or animals, you should be able to think of plenty for yourself: woman, girl, waitress, mare, hen, doe ... But those are not feminine words, they are simply words that refer to females.

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