What dictionary provides gender association for each word? [closed]

In English nouns have one of three genders - masculine, feminine or neuter. Things that are actually male are masculine gender (man, father, bull). Things that are actually female are feminine gender (girl, mother, vixen). Everything else is neuter (table, mountain, idea), and the neuter gender is often used for non-human males and females too. Some would add a fourth gender "common" which consists of things that have a gender but it is undetermined from the word (child, rabbit etc). Common nouns are either treated like neuter ("I see the rabbit. It is large.") or given special treatment if that would be considered insulting ("I see the child. He or she is large.")

There is therefore no need to specify the gender of a noun, and dictionaries do not do it. They are easily determined from the meaning of the word.

There are some conventions and idioms where some neuter words are spoken of with a masculine or feminine gender in some usages - ships are sometimes called "she" and the Earth may be called "she", but it is not universal and it is not part of grammar. It is more grammatically normal to say:

I saw the Earth and it was good

as to say

I saw the Earth and she was good.

Many would say the second is unnecessary anthropomorphising.