Difference between revisions of "Gender (grammar)"

From Glottopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(russian term added)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
*[[classifier]]
 
*[[classifier]]
 
*[[gender (sociolinguistics)]]
 
*[[gender (sociolinguistics)]]
 +
 +
===Origin===
 +
''genus'' Lat.
 +
 +
The term 'gerder' itself derives from an extremely general word meaning 'class' or 'kind'.
  
 
===References===
 
===References===
 
*{{:Corbett 1991}}
 
*{{:Corbett 1991}}
 
*{{:Jespersen 1924}}
 
*{{:Jespersen 1924}}
 +
*{{: Lyons 1968}}
  
 
===Other languages===
 
===Other languages===
 +
*Chinese [[性范畴]]
 
*French [[genre]]
 
*French [[genre]]
 
*German [[Genus]], [[Geschlecht]]
 
*German [[Genus]], [[Geschlecht]]

Revision as of 19:01, 17 June 2008

STUB


Gender is an inflectional dimension used on referring expressions to designate semantic class membership of their denotatum.

  • "By the term gender is here meant any grammatical class-division presenting some analogy to the distinction in the Aryan languages between masculine, feminine and neuter, whether the division be based on the natural division into the two sexes, or on that between animate and inanimate, or on something else." (Jespersen 1924:226)

Comments

Traditionally, the distinction between natural gender (which designates the biological sex of animate referents) and grammatical gender (categorisations which depend on other, culturally specific criteria) has attracted much attention.

List of genders

Synonym

See also

Origin

genus Lat.

The term 'gerder' itself derives from an extremely general word meaning 'class' or 'kind'.

References


Other languages