-(i)an: physician, Parisian, republican
-ant/-ent: assistant, student, informant
-arian: vegetarian
-ее: refugee, employee, payee
-er: teacher, worker, singer
-ician: musician, politician
-ist: socialist, artist
-or: visitor, actor
-let: booklet, leaflet
-ess: actress, tigress, waitress
-ine: heroine
-ix: proprietrix
-ette: usherette
The four suffixes -ess, -ine, -ette are feminine.
Sometimes nouns formed by abstract noun suffixes may come to denote concrete things or persons as in translation (a process and its result), beauty (may denote an abstract notion and a beautiful woman).
Compound nouns consist of at least two stems. The meaning of a compound is not a mere sum of its elements. The main types of compound nouns are:
There are also some traditional associations of certain nouns with gender. These are apparent in the use of personal or possessive pronouns:
a) moon and earth are referred to asfeminine,sun asmasculine:
It is pleasant to watch the sun in his chariot of gold and the moon in her chariot of pearl.
At first the earth was large, but every moment she grew smaller.
b) the names of vessels (ship, boat, steamer, ice-breaker, cruiser, etc.) are referred to asfeminine:
The new ice-breaker has started on her maiden voyage.
She is equipped with up-to-date machinery.
c) the names of vehicles (car, carriage, coach) may also be referred to asfeminine, especially by their
owners, to express their affectionate attitude to these objects:
She is a fine car.
d) the names of countries, if the country is not considered as a mere geographical territory, are referred to as
feminine:
England is proud of her poets.
But: If the name of the country is meant as a geographical one the pronoun it is used. Iceland is an island, it is washed on three sides by the Atlantic Ocean.