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Gender - Grammatical gender |  | Gender - Grammatical gender: Encyclopedia II - Gender - Grammatical gender |  | Main article: grammatical gender
In linguistics, grammatical gender is a type of inflection. We say that a language has grammatical genders, or noun classes, when nouns are divided into groups according to natural characteristics of the concepts which they represent. This division can manifest itself in two ways: through morphological characteristics of the nouns themselves, and through morphological changes in other parts of s ...
See also:Gender, Gender - Etymology and usage, Gender - Grammatical gender, Gender - Sex, Gender - Social category, Gender - In feminist theory, Gender - Other languages, Gender - Other uses, Gender - Fasteners and connectors, Gender - Music |  | | Gender, Gender - Etymology and usage, Gender - Fasteners and connectors, Gender - Grammatical gender, Gender - In feminist theory, Gender - Music, Gender - Other languages, Gender - Other uses, Gender - Sex, Gender - Social category, androgyny, female bodybuilding, femininity, gender bender, gender identity, gender role, Gender Studies, homosexuality, masculinity, Queer, Queer Studies, stereotype, third gender, transgender |  | |
|  |  | Gender: Encyclopedia II - Gender - Grammatical gender
Gender - Grammatical gender
Main article: grammatical gender
In linguistics, grammatical gender is a type of inflection. We say that a language has grammatical genders, or noun classes, when nouns are divided into groups according to natural characteristics of the concepts which they represent. This division can manifest itself in two ways: through morphological characteristics of the nouns themselves, and through morphological changes in other parts of speech that refer to nouns (gender agreement).
For example, in Spanish, most nouns that end in -o are masculine and most nouns that end in -a are feminine. Thus, niño means “boy”, and niña means “girl”. This allows new nouns with a similar meaning to be readily created in a different class, by analogy: given the noun empresario (businessman), it was straightforward to make the new noun empresaria for “businesswoman”, when women reached the work market. This kind of class shift can also have more subtle uses, such as making a collective noun like fruta (group of fruits) from a singular noun like fruto (fruit).
To understand gender agreement, consider the sentences "The man is tall" and "The woman is tall". In English, the only word that differs between them is the noun "man/woman", which has a direct semantic association with sexual identity. In Spanish, however, one says "El hombre es alto" and "La mujer es alta", respectively. Not only do the words for "man" and "woman" change, (hombre vs. mujer), but so do the article (el, la) and the adjective (alto, alta). When a noun belongs to a certain class, other parts of speech that refer to that noun must be inflected to be in the same class. This is similar to number agreement, whereby parts of speech that refer to a noun are inflected to agree with the grammatical number of that noun.
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 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Grammatical gender", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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