Nouns and adjectives — gender
Making feminine forms
In French all nouns and adjectives are gendered masculine or feminine; most nouns and adjectives also have different singular and plural forms. It is important to recognize the gender and number of nouns because the form and qualities of the noun can determine the conjugation of verbs, the form of pronouns, and article and adjective agreement.
Nouns and adjectives undergo predictable changes between masculine and feminine forms, and between singular and plural forms. These forms are numerous, as demonstrated below. Some nouns have both masculine and feminine forms (un ami, une amie, for example). Generally, nouns constructed like adjectives, according to the rules below, will follow the same pattern as adjectives for generating feminine forms. Formation of the feminine:
1. Generally, if an adjective ends in -e in the masculine, the feminine forms will be identical:
facile, facile
solide, solide
2. If an adjective in the masculine ends in any other vowel, or in -ent, -ant, an -e is added to form the feminine:
passé, passée
ravi, ravie
intéressant, intéressante
BUT:
fou, folle
3. Adjectives ending in “vowel + l, n, s, or t” generally double the consonant and add an -e:
gentil, gentille
gros, grosse
ancien, ancienne
4. Other common changes in endings are as follows:
-eux —> -euse: heureux, heureuse
-oux —> -ouse: jaloux, jalouse
-eur —> -euse: menteur, menteuse (except: meilleur, intérieur, extérieur, etc.)
-teur —> -trice: conservateur, conservatrice
-er —> -ère: régulier, régulière
-f —> -ve: veuf, veuve
5. Some adjectives are irregular:
beau, belle
nouveau, nouvelle
mou, molle
vieux, vieille
blanc, blanche
sec, sèche
public, publique
6. Certain colors, especially compound adjectives or adjectives formed from nouns, are invariable:
orange
châtain
bleu foncé
Recognizing the gender of nouns
While there are few hard and fast rules for recognizing the gender of French nouns, some patterns and tendencies can be presented.
1. Common feminine endings:
Nouns ending in -tion or -sion:
l’inflation
la nation
la personnification
l’infusion
Most nouns ending in -ique:
la symbolique
la dynamique
la physique
Most nouns ending in a doubled consonant followed by “e”:
la ville
la fille
la somme
la guerre
la technicienne
Most nouns ending in -ie:
la paralysie
la chimie
la philosophie
Most nouns ending in -té:
la médiocrité
l’identité
la mendicité
la santé
Most nouns ending in -ence or -ance:
l’indigence
l’aisance
la balance
Most nouns ending in -eur:
la longueur
la grandeur
la largeur
2. Common masculine endings:
Nouns ending in -ent:
l’appartement
le parlement
le changement
l’établissement
le président
Nouns ending in -isme:
le capitalisme
l’individualisme
le structuralisme
Most nouns formed from verb infinitives:
le savoir
le pouvoir
Most compound nouns:
le tire-bouchon
l’arc-en-ciel
Many nouns ending with vowel + consonant:
le salon
le billet
le soldat
le technicien
3. Masculine or Feminine.
Many nouns referring to people can be masculine or feminine depending on the person they refer to, even if they don’t change forms:
le partenaire, la partenaire
le dentiste, la dentiste
le révolutionnaire, la révolutionnaire
BUT:
la victime
la personne
Some nouns of profession exist only in the masculine form:
le professeur
l’écrivain
le médecin
l’arbitre
le juge
BUT: feminine forms are sometimes made by adding making compound nouns with “femme”:
une femme écrivain
un médecin femme
4. Gender of countries.
Nearly all country and state names ending in -e are feminine:
la France
la Colombie
la Floride
la Russie
BUT:
le Mexique
le Zaïre
Nearly all others are masculine:
le Japon
le Brésil
les Etats-Unis
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