In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun judge is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female.
Judge is a common gender noun. There is no need to further identify a judge by their gender. Other feminized nouns have fallen out of use as they are unnecessary.
no she was a judge
A judge, who happens to be a female, is still a 'judge' a modern term that is gender neutral.
Executrix...
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'judge' is a commongender noun, a word for a male or a female.
the theme is don't judge someone by their gender.
A judge !
BeCause you'll know if you like girls and people just judge people and be jerks, by the way nothing is wrong with someone liking there own gender.
An umpire or referee
no. you cant judge that either. you dont judge people by their routines.
You may be referring to common gender nouns, words that can be used for a male or a female; some examples are parent, friend, teacher, lawyer, judge, horse, bird, etc. Or, you may be referring to pronouns that are not gender specific such as they, them, their, it (for animals). Or, indefinite pronouns for people or animals such as anyone, everyone, everything, no one, somebody, something, etc.