Genders of languages
Appearance
- Afrikaans (af): No genders.
- Breton (br): Feminine and masculine.
- Danish (da): Two genders (en common and et neuter).
- Dutch (nl): Masculine, feminine, neuter and a kind of common (which are feminine nouns that are both f and m in Holland).
- English (en): No genders.
- Esperanto (eo): No genders.
- Finnish (fi): No genders.
- French (fr): Feminine and masculine.
- German (de): Feminine, neuter and masculine (only in singular).
- Greek, ancient (grc): Masculine, feminine and neuter.
- Hindi (hi): Feminine and masculine.
- Hungarian (hu): No genders.
- Indonesian (id): No genders.
- Italian (it): Feminine and masculine.
- Japanese (ja): No genders.
- Kannada (kn): Masculine, feminine and neuter.
- Latin (la): Masculine, feminine and neuter.
- Latvian (lv): Feminine and masculine.
- Lithuanian (lt): Feminine and masculine.
- Polish (pl): Three genders in singular, two genders in plural.
- Portuguese (pt): Two genders (feminine and masculine).
- Romanian (ro): Three genders (feminine, masculine and neuter -- actually masculine nouns that go feminine in plural).
- Russian (ru): Three genders in singular, one gender in plural.
- Slovene (sl): Feminine, neuter and masculine.
- Spanish (es): Two genders (feminine and masculine).
- Swedish (sv): Two genders (en common and ett neuter).
- Tagalog (tl): Gender-neutral in general. Some nouns are explicitly masculine, feminine or neither (e.g. neutral or genderless).
- Welsh (cy): Feminine and masculine.