In my language, this is a he

in my language, this is a he

in yours?

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crainn

It's just a tree.

in mine, it is an it

In my language this is it.

yeah but a he it or a she it?

Male

Not sure if my language is gendered

Attached: 1377831557190.png (559x448, 11K)

In mine, it's neuter gendered.

In my language, this is an it

It is. Not as much as some, but it is.

Just a träd. No gender.

It's a she.

No such a designations exist in English. Why would you describe a gender to something like a tree It's just a thing

how do you think babby trees are made? dumbie

It's a he if it's just a tree, it may become a she depending of the species

Clones

Wait really? Do you actually have to keep track what species of tree belongs to what gender group or are you just baitin' me?

>describe a gender
Gender it's just a way to say category, we call it male or female because it turns out that some categories coincide with those we use to refer to males and females

She

sci fi is not real, dumbie

It's intuitive: in Spanish if the noun ends with o or e, its gender is masculine, if it ends with a, it's feminine.

El Pino (Pine) = Masculine
La Marihuana = Femenine

A she, OBVIOUSLY.

In Portuguese it's the same, but you can tell from the name of the tree itself.

Example:
>Tree: Árvore, female
>Apple tree: Macieira, female
>Oak: Salgueiro, male
>Generic name for ____ tree: Pé-de-_____, always male, no matter the fruit

Ah, fair enough then that makes a lot more sense.

Sperm and eggs from the same tree can make seeds so tell me how it's not fucking cloning

Gender is fluid.

Bigots BTFO.

también

it's third gender (no gender)

it's an "it"

also male (arbre)

is it derevo?

El árbol.
He.

it