No.
But what is interesting is that behaviors considered feminine - i.e. asking for help, dependence, crying, etc. were not accepted by my parents. Emotional weakness as a concept was never endorsed by either of them, despite the fact it is now evident to me that both of them were emotionally weak people themselves.
They were also both emotionally distant from me. I was raised by a mother that seemed to see independence and personal freedom as the highest virtues.
No surprise that's exactly what I ended up believing too, as well as that a "weakness attitude" in myself was despicable.
But neither of them ever brought gender up in that way. I had a pretty un-gendered upbringing - allowed to play with whichever toys I preferred, and not forced to dress or act a certain way by my parents. I don't recall a sexist statement from any of them against women.
So it's interesting to me that I developed a masculine outlook because of them, or what would appear to be a masculine outlook, although I still think it's coincidental to the problems of my transsexuality. Neither of them had ideological input on the topic of sex, for example, but I had some instinctive and pervasive problem with female anatomy and sex that could not have come from anywhere else but from within me, and I never made the connection between masculine "behaviors" or attitudes, and physical sex at that age.
In short, many of my attitudes and habits come from the nurture, but there are gender-related problems I have that have no identifiable root, other than that they just are, and seem to come from a place like instinct. I had every reason to feel confident as a girl from my nurture - my mother was a staunch 2nd wave feminist after all - but I was never comfortable as one, or of being considered one.
In my case I am quite sure my condition comes from my nature, not my nurture.