In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. Noun and verb forms are neutral. Gender is shown by different forms or different words, for example:
A friar is a male member of a religious order. A monk is a male member of a religious order that lives secluded in a monetary.
A nun is a female member of a religious order. A nun may live is the secular world or live secluded in a convent, there is no specific noun to distinguish these two types of nun.
The feminine form of friar is "nun." A friar is a member of a male religious order, typically living in a monastery or friary, while a nun is a member of a female religious order, living in a convent or monastery. The term "friar" is specifically used for men, while "nun" is used for women in religious contexts.
It is countess.
is a form of = είναι μια μορφή του* / της**(*masc/neuter)(**feminine)
Pascal is a male names. Pascale is the feminine form of the name.
Emilee is the feminine form of the Roman family name Aemilius, meaning "rival."
I've only found that Geet is "song"; could it be a feminine form, or derivative/blend?
There is no feminine form of Friar. Friar comes from the French word frere, which means "brother". The church being sexist never came up with a feminine version. Some would suggest a nun is the female form of friar, but this is not true. A nun is the female form of a monk, not a friar.
The feminine form of ami is amie. The feminine plural is amies.
The feminine form of alumnus is alumna. The feminine plural is alumnae.
The feminine form of bajo is baja. The feminine plural is bajas.
Mistress is the feminine form of master. It is already in feminine form.
Baroness is the feminine form.
The feminine form of charmant is charmante. The feminine plural is charmantes.
The feminine form for host is "hostess."
The feminine form of "mauvais" is "mauvaise."
The feminine form of benefactor is benefactress.
Ta means "your" before a feminine, singular noun.
The masculine form of "duke" is "duke," and the feminine form is "duchess."