is cafe masculine or feminine

Etymology. Borrowed from French café (“coffee; coffee shop”).

Is coffee in Spanish masculine?

Coffee in Spanish is café and it is pronounced as (kah-feh). Something else to know about Spanish is that the nouns have gender – either masculine or feminine. In the case of coffee, it is a masculine noun. This means that cafe uses the masculine article “el”.

Is coffee a feminine word in French?

The gender of café is masculine.

Is café short for cafeteria?

is that cafeteria is a restaurant in which customers select their food at a counter then carry it on a tray to a table to eat while cafe is a coffee shop; an establishment selling coffee and sometimes other drinks or snacks, with a facility to consume them on the premises.

Is café a male?

The word café is a masculine noun. Be sure to use masculine articles and adjectives with it.

How do you order in a café in Spanish?

The simplest and most efficient way to order a coffee (regardless of which Spanish-speaking country you’re in) is by saying “Un café, por favor” (A coffee, please). That’s easy enough, but what do you do if your barista or waiter asks “¿Cómo lo quiere?” (How would you like it?).

Is Eau masculine or feminine?

Water in French is “l’eau”. It’s feminine, and pronounced [lo]. Plural is “les eaux” pronounced [lé zo].

What is Cafe German?

English. German. the café das Café

What is the plural of Cafe?

plural cafés also cafes. café noun. also cafe /kæˈfeɪ/ Brit /ˈkæˌfeɪ/ plural cafés also cafes.

Is tea in French feminine or masculine?

thé complet {masculine}

What do you call a coffee shop in France?

1. (= cafe) café m. 2. (= shop) magasin m de café

Is the word café Spanish?

café’ / ‘color café’ is not used in Spain and can be understood in Hispanic America. ‘marrón’ is used in Spain.

Is Soup feminine or masculine French?

The gender of soupe is feminine. E.g. la soupe.

Is Bakery masculine or feminine in French?

The French, Ils sont à la boulangerie., can be broken down into 5 parts:”they (masculine)” (ils), “are (3rd person plural)” (sont), “at” (à), “the (feminine)” (la) and “bakery” (boulangerie).

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