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Everything about Grammatical Gender totally explained

In linguistics, grammatical genders, sometimes also called noun classes, are classes of nouns reflected in the behavior of associated words; every noun must belong to one of the classes and there should be very few which belong to several classes at once. If a language distinguishes between masculine and feminine gender, for instance, then each noun belongs to one of those two genders; in order to correctly decline any noun and any modifier or other type of word affecting that noun, one must identify whether the noun is feminine or masculine. The term "grammatical gender" is mostly used for Indo-European languages, many of which follow the pattern just described. Modern English, however, is normally described as lacking grammatical gender.
   The linguistic notion of grammatical gender is distinguished from the biological and social notion of natural gender, although they interact closely in many languages. Both grammatical and natural gender can have linguistic effects in a given language.
   Although some authors use the term "noun class" as a synonym or an extension of "grammatical gender", for others they're separate concepts.

Overview

Many languages place each noun into one of three gender classes (or simply "genders"):
  • Masculine gender: includes most words that refer to males;
  • Feminine gender: includes most words that refer to females;
  • Neuter gender: includes mostly words that don't refer to males or females
For example, in their nominative singular forms Polish nouns are typically feminine if they've the ending -a, neuter when they end with -o, -e, or , and masculine if they've no gender suffix (null morpheme). Thus, encyklopedia "encyclopaedia" is feminine, krzesło "chair" is neuter, and ręcznik "towel" is masculine. When the adjective duży "big" is combined with these nouns in phrases, it changes form according to their grammatical gender:
Gender Noun Phrase Meaning
Masculine ręcznik duży ręcznik big towel
Feminine encyklopedia duża encyklopedia big encyclopaedia
Neuter krzesło duże krzesło big chair
As can be seen, the neuter gender doesn't include all nouns that correspond to genderless realities. Some of these may be designated by nouns that are grammatically masculine or feminine. Also, some nouns that refer to males or females may have a different grammatical gender. In general, the boundaries of noun classes are rather arbitrary, although there are rules of thumb in many languages. In this context, the terms "masculine", "feminine" and "neuter" should be understood merely as convenient labels. They are suggestive class descriptors, but not every member of a class is well described by its label.
   Gender marking isn't substantial in modern English. However, distinctions in personal pronouns have been inherited from Old English which can be used to give a flavour of how grammatical gender works. » John insisted that he would pay for his own dinner.


    Jane insisted that she would pay for her own dinner. Here, the gender of the subject is marked both on the personal pronouns (he/she) and on the possessive adjectives (his/her). Marking of gender on the possessive form can be considered redundant in these examples, since his own and her own must refer to their respective antecedents, he and she, which are already unambiguously marked for gender.
   A full system of grammatical gender involves two phenomena:
  • Inflection: Many words have different forms for different genders, and certain morphological markers are characteristic of each gender.
  • Agreement: Every noun is associated with one gender class. In a phrase or clause, words that refer to a given noun inflect to match the gender of that noun. Note that some words, called epicene, may have identical forms for different genders. For example, in Spanish estudiante "student" and grande "big" can be masculine or feminine.
       Spanish is also an example of a language with only two genders, masculine and feminine; it has no neuter noun class. Nouns that designate entities with no natural gender, such as objects or abstractions, are distributed among the masculine and the feminine. In a few other languages, notably Germanic languages like Swedish, the former masculine and feminine genders have become indistinguishable with time, merging into a new class called the common gender, which however remains distinct from the neuter gender.
  • Common gender: includes most words that refer to males or females, but is distinct from the neuter gender. Other languages still, like English, are regarded as not having grammatical gender, since they don't make gender distinctions through inflection, and don't generally require gender agreement between related words.
       Some authors have extended the concept of "grammatical gender" to the expression of other types of natural, individual characteristics through inflection, such as animacy. See the section on gender across languages, below.
       Grammatical gender (with masculine and/or feminine categories) is commonly found in Afro-Asiatic, Dravidian, Indo-European, Northeast Caucasian, and several Australian aboriginal languages. It is mostly absent in the Altaic, Austronesian, Sino-Tibetan, and Uralic language families. The Niger-Congo languages typically have an extensive system of noun classes, which some authors regard as a type of grammatical gender, but others describe as something completely different.

    Gender inflection

    In many languages, gender is marked quite profusely, surfacing in different ways. » "I love you" in Arabic:


       : said to a male — uħibbuka (أُحِبُّكََ) » : said to a female — uħibbuki (أُحِبُّكِ)

    » "Thank you very much" in Portuguese:


       : said by a male — muito obrigado » : said by a female — muito obrigada

    The switch from one gender to the other is typically achieved by inflecting appropriate words, the object suffix of the verb uħibbu-ka/ki in the Arabic example (gender isn't marked in the first person, in Arabic), and the subject suffix in the past participle (or adjective) obrig-ado/a in the Portuguese example (literally this means "much obliged", with "I am" understood; thus it agrees with the gender of the speaker).
       In Spanish, most masculine nouns and modifiers end with the suffix -o or with a consonant, while the suffix -a is characteristic of feminine nouns (though there are exceptions). Thus, niño means “boy”, and niña means “girl”. This paradigm can be exploited for making new words: from the masculine nouns abogado "lawyer", diputado "member of parliament" and doctor "doctor", it was straightforward to make the feminine equivalents abogada, diputada, and doctora.
       Sometimes, gender is expressed in more subtle ways. On the whole, gender marking has been lost in Welsh, both on the noun, and, often, on the adjective. However, it has the peculiar feature of initial mutation, where the first consonant of a word changes into another in certain syntactical conditions. Gender is one of the factors that can cause mutation, especially the so-called soft mutation. For instance, the word merch, which means girl or daughter, changes into ferch after the definite article. This only occurs with feminine nouns; for example, mab "son" remains unchanged after the definite article. Adjectives are affected by gender in a similar way.
    Gender Default After definite article With adjective
    Masculine mab son y mab the son y mab mawr the big son
    Feminine merch girl y ferch the girl y ferch fawr the big girl

    Personal names

    Personal names are frequently constructed with language-specific affixes that identify the gender of the bearer. Common feminine suffixes used in English names are -a, of Latin or Romance origin (cf. Robert and Roberta) and -e, of French origin (cf. Justin and Justine). Although gender inflections may be used to construct cognate nouns for people of opposite genders in languages that have grammatical gender, this alone doesn't constitute grammatical gender. Distinct names for men and women are also common in languages where gender isn't grammatical.

    Personal pronouns

    Personal pronouns often have different forms based on gender. Even though it has lost grammatical gender, English still distinguishes between "he" (generally applied to a male person), "she" (female person), and "it" (object, abstraction, or animal). But this also doesn't guarantee the existence of grammatical gender. There is a spoken form, "they", which although not part of the standard literary language, is cosmopolitan in the English-speaking world and is used when the gender of a person being referred to isn't known (for example "This person doesn't know where they are going").
       Gendered pronouns and their corresponding inflections vary considerably across languages. In languages that never had grammatical gender, there's normally just one word for "he" and "she", like hän in Finnish and ő in Hungarian. These languages have different pronouns and inflections in the third person only to differentiate between people and inanimate objects (and even this distinction is commonly waived in spoken Finnish).

    Dummy pronouns

    In languages with only a masculine and a feminine gender, the default dummy pronoun is usually the masculine third person singular. For example, the French sentence for "It's raining" is Il pleut, literally "He rains". There are some exceptions: the corresponding sentence in Welsh is Mae hi'n bwrw glaw, literally "She's raining".

    Gender agreement

    In the French sentences Il est un grand acteur "He is a great actor" and Elle est une grande actrice "She is a great actress", almost every word changes to match the gender of the subject. The noun acteur inflects by changing the masculine suffix -eur into the feminine suffix -rice, the subject pronoun il "he" changes to elle "she", and the feminine suffix -e is added to the article (unune) and to the adjective (grandgrande).
       The following "highly contrived" Old English sentence serves as an example of gender agreement.
    Old English Seo brade lind wæs tilu and ic hire lufod.
    Literal translation That broad shield was good and I her loved.
    Modern English That broad shield was good and I loved it.
    The word hire "her" refers to lind "shield". Since this noun was grammatically feminine, the adjectives brade "broad" and tilu "good", as well as the pronouns seo "the/that" and hire "her", which referred to lind, must also appear in their feminine forms. Old English had three genders, masculine, feminine and neuter, but gender inflections were greatly simplified by sound changes, and then completely lost (as well as number inflections, to a lesser extent).
       In modern English, by contrast, the noun "shield" takes the neuter pronoun "it", since it designates a genderless object. In a sense, the neuter gender has grown to encompass most nouns, including many that were masculine or feminine in Old English. If one were to replace the phrase "broad shield" with "brave man" or "kind woman", the only change to the rest of the sentence would be in the pronoun at the end, which would become "him" or "her", respectively.

    Grammatical vs. natural gender

    The grammatical gender of a word doesn't always coincide with real gender of its referent. An often cited example is the German word Mädchen, which means "girl", but is treated grammatically as neuter. This is because it was constructed as the diminutive of Magd (archaic nowadays), and the diminutive suffix -chen conventionally places nouns in the "neuter" noun class. A few more examples:
  • German die Frau (feminine) and das Weib (neuter) both mean "the woman".
  • Irish cailín "girl" is masculine, while stail "stallion" is feminine. Normally, such exceptions are a small minority. However, in some local dialects of German, all nouns for female persons have shifted to the neuter gender (presumably further influenced by the standard word Weib), but the feminine gender remains for some words denoting objects.

    Indeterminate gender

    In languages with a masculine and feminine gender (and possibly a neuter), the masculine is usually employed by default to refer to persons of unknown gender. This is still done sometimes in English, although an alternative is to use the singular "they". Another alternative is to use two nouns, as in the phrase "ladies and gentlemen" (hendiadys).
       In the plural, the masculine is often used to refer to a mixed group of people. Thus, in French the feminine pronoun elles always designates an all-female group of people, but the masculine pronoun ils may refer to a group of males, to a mixed group, or to a group of people of unknown genders. In English, this issue doesn't arise with pronouns, since there's only one plural third person pronoun, "they". However, a group of actors and actresses would still be described as a group of "actors".
       In all these cases, one says that the feminine gender is semantically marked, while the masculine gender is unmarked.

    Animals

    Often, the masculine/feminine classification is only followed carefully for human beings. For animals, the relation between real and grammatical gender tends to be more arbitrary. In Spanish, for instance, a cheetah is always un guepardo (masculine) and a zebra is always una cebra (feminine), regardless of their biological sex. If it becomes necessary to specify the sex of the animal, an adjective is added, as in un guepardo hembra (a female cheetah), or una cebra macho (a male zebra). Different names for the male and the female of a species are more frequent for common pets or farm animals, eg. English horse and mare, Spanish vaca "cow" and toro "bull".
       In English, individual speakers may prefer one gender or another for animals of unknown sex, depending on species — for instance, a tendency to refer more often to dogs as "he" and to cats as "she".

    Objects and abstractions

    Since all nouns must belong to some noun class, many end up with genders which are purely conventional. For instance, the Romance languages inherited sol "sun" (which is masculine) and luna "moon" (which is feminine) from Latin but in German and other Germanic languages Sonne "sun" is feminine and Mond "moon" is masculine. Two nouns denoting the same concept can also differ in gender in closely related languages, or within a single language. For instance, there are two different words for "car" in German. "Wagen" is masculine, whereas "Auto" is neutral. Meanwhile the word "auto" is masculine in Spanish, but it's feminine in French. In all cases, the meaning is the same.
       Several words ending in -aje in Spanish are masculine: viaje (travel), paisaje (landscape), coraje (courage). But their Portuguese translations are feminine: viagem, paisagem, coragem. Reversely, the Spanish word "nariz" (nose) is feminine, whereas the Portuguese word for "nose" is spelt identically, but it's masculine.
       Also, in Polish the word księżyc "moon" is masculine, but its Russian counterpart луна is feminine. The Russian word for Солнце "sun" is neuter. Also, in Russian the word собака "dog" is feminine, but its Ukrainian counterpart (with the same spelling and almost identical pronunciation) is masculine.
       More examples:
    Language Word Meaning Gender
    Polish księżyc moon masculine
    Russian луна moon feminine
    Russian картофель potato masculine
    Russian картошка spud feminine
    There is nothing inherent about the moon or a potato which makes them objectively "male" or "female". In these cases, gender is quite independent of meaning, and a property of the nouns themselves, rather than of their referents.
       Sometimes the gender switches: Russian тополь (poplar) is now masculine, but less than 200 years ago (in writings of Lermontov) it was feminine. The modern loanword виски (from whisky/whiskey) was originally feminine (in a translation of Jack London stories, 1915), then masculine (in a song of Alexander Vertinsky, 1920s or 1930s), and today it has become neuter (the masculine variant is typically considered archaic, and the feminine one is completely forgotten).

    Gender assignment

    There are three main ways by which natural languages categorize nouns into genders: according to logical or symbolic similarities in their meaning (semantic criterion), by grouping them with other nouns that have similar form (morphology), or through an arbitrary convention (possibly rooted in the language's history). Usually, a combination of the three types of criteria is used, though one is more prevalent.

    Semantics

    In Alamblak, a Sepik Hill language spoken in Papua New Guinea, the masculine gender includes males and things which are tall or long and slender, or narrow such as fish, crocodile, long snakes, arrows, spears and tall slender trees, and the feminine gender includes females and things which are short, squat or wide, such as turtles, frogs, houses, fighting shields, and trees that are typically more round and squat than others. A more or less discernible correlation between noun gender and the shape of the respective object is found in some languages even in the Indo-European family.
       Sometimes, semantics prevails over the formal assignment of grammatical gender (agreement in sensu). In Latin, for example, nauta "sailor" is masculine, and nurus "daughter-in-law" is feminine, even though the endings -a and -us are normally associated with the feminine and the masculine, respectively. In Polish, the nouns mężczyzna "man" and książę "prince" are masculine, even though words with the ending -a are normally feminine and words that end with are usually neuter. See also Synesis.

    Morphology

    In Spanish, grammatical gender is determined by noun morphology. Since nouns that refer to male persons usually end in -o or a consonant and nouns that refer to female persons usually end in -a, most other nouns that end in -o or a consonant are also treated as masculine, and most nouns that end in -a are treated as feminine, whatever their meaning. (Nouns that end in some other vowel are assigned a gender either according to etymology, by analogy, or by some other convention.) Morphology may in fact override meaning, in some cases. The noun miembro "member" is always masculine, even when it refers to a woman, but persona "person" is always feminine, even when it refers to a man.
       In German also, diminutives with the endings -chen and -lein (cognates of English -kin and -ling meaning little, young) are always neuter, which is why Mädchen "girl" and Fräulein "young woman" are neuter. Another ending, the nominalizing suffix -ling, can be used to make countable nouns from uncountable nouns (Teig "dough" → Teigling "piece of dough"), or personal nouns from abstract nouns (Lehre "teaching", Strafe "punishment" → Lehrling "apprentice", Sträfling "convict") or adjectives (feige "cowardly" → Feigling "coward"), always producing masculine nouns.
       In Irish, nouns ending in -óir/-eoir and -ín are always masculine; those ending -óg/-eog or -lann are always feminine.
       On the other hand, the correlation between grammatical gender and morphology is usually not perfect: problema "problem" is masculine in Spanish (this is for etymological reasons), and radio "radio station" is feminine (because it's a shortening of estación de radio, a phrase whose head is the feminine noun estación).

    Convention

    In some languages, gender markers have been so eroded by time that they're no longer recognizable, even to native speakers. Most German nouns give no morphological or semantic clue as to their gender. It must simply be memorized. The conventional aspect of grammatical gender is also clear when one considers that there's nothing objective about a table which makes it feminine as French table, masculine as German Tisch, or neuter as Norwegian bord. The learner of such languages should regard gender as an integral part of each noun. A frequent recommendation is to memorize a modifier along with the noun as a unit, usually a definite article, for example memorizing la table — where la is the French feminine singular definite article — der Tisch - where der is the German masculine singular nominative definite article — and bordet — where the suffix -et indicates the definite neuter singular in Norwegian.
       Whether a distant ancestor of French, German, Norwegian, and English had a semantic value for genders is of course a different matter. Some authors have speculated that archaic Proto-Indo-European had two noun classes with the semantic values of animate and inanimate.

    Gender in English

    While grammatical gender was a fully productive inflectional category in Old English, Modern English has a much less pervasive gender system, primarily based on natural gender.

    Gender across language families

    Indo-European

    Many Indo-European languages, though not English, provide archetypical examples of grammatical gender.
       Many linguists think the earliest stages of Proto-Indo-European had two genders, animate and inanimate, as did Hittite, but the inanimate gender later split into neuter and feminine, originating the classical three-way classification into masculine, feminine, and neuter which most of its descendants inherited. Many Indo-European languages kept these three genders. Such is the case with most Slavic languages, classical Latin, Sanskrit, Greek, and German, for instance. Other Indo-European languages reduced the number of genders to two, either by losing the neuter (like most Romance languages and the Celtic languages), or by having the feminine and the masculine merge with one another into a common gender (as has happened, or is in the process of happening, to several Germanic languages). Some, like English and Afrikaans, have all but lost grammatical gender. On the other hand, a few Slavic languages have arguably added new genders to the classical three. In those ancient and modern Indo-European languages that preserve a system of noun declension (including Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, Slavic, and some Germanic languages), there's a high but not absolute correlation between grammatical gender and declensional class. Many linguists also believe this to be true of the middle and late stages of Proto-Indo-European.
       Exceptionally for a Romance language, Romanian has preserved the three genders of Latin, although the neuter has been reduced to a combination of the other two, in the sense that neuter nouns have masculine endings in the singular, but feminine endings in the plural. As a consequence, adjectives, pronouns, and pronominal adjectives only have two forms, both in the singular and in the plural. The same happens in Italian, to a lesser extent.
       Italian third-person singular pronouns have also a "neuter" form to refer to inanimate subjects (egli and ella vs. esso and essa). In fact, even in those languages where the original three genders have been mostly lost or reduced, there's sometimes a trace of them in a few words. » English, personal pronouns: he, she, it


        Spanish, definite articles (words meaning "the"): el, la, lo » Spanish, demonstratives (words meaning "this, this one"): este, esta, esto


        Portuguese, indefinite pronouns (words meaning "all of him/her/it"): todo, toda, tudo The Spanish neuter definite article lo, for example, is used with nouns that denote abstractions, eg. lo único "the only thing"; lo mismo "the same thing". In Portuguese, a distinction is made between está todo molhado "he's all wet", está toda molhada "she's all wet", and está tudo molhado "it's all wet" (used for unspecified objects). In terms of agreement, however, these "neuter" words count as masculine: both Spanish lo mismo and Portuguese tudo take masculine adjectives. English modifiers don't generally inflect with gender.
       In Venetian, only the demonstratives have a neuter form referring to abstactions, so a distinction is made between varda questo "look at this thing" (neuter), varda 'sto qua "look at this one" (masculine eg. man, book, mobile) and varda 'sta qua "look at this one (feminine eg. woman, pen, hand); along the same line a distinction is made between l'è queło / queła "it's that thing/fact" (neuter), l'è qûeło là "it's that one" (masc.) and l'è qûeła là "it's that one" (fem.) where the "û" sound can be dropped only in the masculine and in the feminine which however take "là".
       See, and Gender in Dutch grammar, for further information.

    Other types of gender classifications

    Some languages have gender-like noun classifications unrelated to gender identity. Particularly common are languages with animate and inanimate categories. The term "grammatical genders" is also used by extension in this case, although many authors prefer "noun classes" when none of the inflections in a language relate to sexuality. Note however that the word "gender" derives from Latin genus (also the root of genre) originally meant "kind", so it doesn't necessarily have a sexual meaning. For further information, see Animacy.
       Some Slavic languages, including Russian and Czech, make grammatical distinctions between animate and inanimate nouns (in Czech only in the masculine gender; in Russian only in masculine singular, but in the plural in all genders). Another example is Polish, which can be said to distinguish five genders: personal masculine (referring to male humans), animate non-personal masculine, inanimate masculine, feminine, and neuter.
    masculine translation
    animate inanimate
    personal impersonal
    Polish To jest
    dobry nauczyciel.
    To jest
    dobry pies.
    To jest
    dobry ser.
    It's a good teacher
    / a good dog / good cheese.
    Widzę
    dobrego nauczyciela.
    Widzę
    dobrego psa.
    Widzę
    dobry ser.
    I see a good teacher
    / a good dog / good cheese.
    Widzę
    dobrych nauczycieli.
    Widzę
    dobre psy.
    Widzę
    dobre sery.
    I see good teachers
    / good dogs / good cheeses.
    Slovene To je
    dober učitelj / dober pes.
    To je
    dober sir.
    It's a good teacher
    / a good dog / good cheese.
    Vidim
    dobrega učitelja / dobrega psa.
    Vidim
    dober sir.
    I see a good teacher
    / a good dog / good cheese.
    See Polish language: Grammar, for further information.

    Australian Aboriginal languages

    The Dyirbal language is well known for its system of four noun classes, which tend to be divided along the following semantic lines:
    » I — animate objects, men


        II — women, water, fire, violence » III — edible fruit and vegetables


        IV — miscellaneous (includes things not classifiable in the first three)
       The class usually labeled "feminine", for instance, includes the word for fire and nouns relating to fire, as well as all dangerous creatures and phenomena. This inspired the title of the George Lakoff book Women, Fire and Dangerous Things (ISBN 0-226-46804-6).
       The Ngangikurrunggurr language has noun classes reserved for canines, and hunting weapons, and the Anindilyakwa language has a noun class for things that reflect light. The Diyari language distinguishes only between female and other objects. Perhaps the most noun classes in any Australian language are found in Yanyuwa, which has 16 noun classes.

    Caucasian languages

    Some members of the Northwest Caucasian family, and almost all of the Northeast Caucasian languages, manifest noun class. In the Northeast Caucasian family, only Lezgian, Udi, and Aghul don't have noun classes. Some languages have only two classes, while the Bats language has eight. The most widespread system, however, has four classes, for male, female, animate beings and certain objects, and finally a class for the remaining nouns. The Andi language has a noun class reserved for insects.
       Among Northwest Caucasian languages, Abkhaz shows a masculine-feminine-neuter distinction. Ubykh shows some inflections along the same lines, but only in some instances, and in some of these instances inflection for noun class isn't even obligatory.
       In all Caucasian languages that manifest class, it isn't marked on the noun itself but on the dependent verbs, adjectives, pronouns and prepositions.

    Niger-Congo languages

    The Zande language distinguishes four noun classes:
    Criterion Example Gloss
    male human kumba man
    female human dia wife
    animate nya beast
    other bambu house
    There are about 80 inanimate nouns which are in the animate class, including nouns denoting heavenly objects (moon, rainbow), metal objects (hammer, ring), edible plants (sweet potato, pea), and non-metallic objects (whistle, ball). Many of the exceptions have a round shape, and some can be explained by the role they play in Zande mythology.

    Auxiliary and constructed languages

    Many constructed languages have natural gender systems similar to that of English. Animate nouns can have distinct forms reflecting natural gender, and personal pronouns are selected according to natural gender. There is no gender agreement on modifiers. The first three languages below fall into this category.
  • Esperanto features the female suffix -in. While it differentiates a small number of male and female nouns such as patro (father) and patrino (mother), most nouns are gender-neutral and the use of it isn't necessary. For instance, hundo means either a male or female dog, virhundo means a male dog, and hundino means a female dog. The personal pronouns li (he) and ŝi (she) and their possessive forms lia (his) and ŝia (her) are used for male and female antecedents, while ĝi (it) and its possessive form ĝia (its) are used to refer to a non-personal antecedent, or as an epicene pronoun.
  • Ido has the masculine infix -ul and the feminine infix -in for animate beings. Both are optional and are used only if it's necessary to avoid ambiguity. Thus: kato "a cat", katulo "a male cat", katino "a female cat". There are third person singular and plural pronouns for all three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter, but also gender-free pronouns.
  • Interlingua has no grammatical gender. It indicates only natural gender, as in matre "mother" and patre "father". Interlingua speakers may use feminine endings. For example, -a may be used in place of -o in catto, producing catta "female cat". Professora may be used to denote a professor who is female, and actrice may be used to mean "actress". As in Ido, inflections marking gender are optional, although some gender-specific nouns such as femina, "woman", happen to end in -a or -o. Interlingua has feminine pronouns, and its general pronoun forms are also used as masculine pronouns.
  • The fictional Klingon language has three classes: capable of speaking, body part and other. See also Gender-neutrality in languages with grammatical gender: International auxiliary languages, and Gender-neutral pronoun: Constructed languages.

    Male and female speech

    Some natural languages have intricate systems of gender-specific vocabulary, which are not the same as grammatical gender.
  • The oldest recorded language is Sumerian. The Sumerians lived in what is now southern Iraq about 5,000 years ago. Sumerian women had a special language called Emesal, distinct from the main language, Emegir, which was spoken by both genders. The women's language had a distinct vocabulary, found in the records of religious rituals to be performed by women, also in the speech of goddesses in mythological texts.
  • For a significant period of time in the history of the ancient languages of India, after the formal language Sanskrit diverged from the popular Prakrit languages, some Sanskrit plays recorded the speech of women in Prakrit, distinct from the Sanskrit of male speakers. This convention was also used for illiterate and low-caste male speakers.
  • More recently, Thai shows evidence of similar features, where women have vocabulary items used in common speech, but typically distinct ones to be used among themselves.
  • Garifuna has a vocabulary split between terms used only by men and terms used only by women. This doesn't however affect the entire vocabulary but when it does, the terms used by men generally come from Carib and those used by women come from Arawak.
  • The indigenous Australian language Yanyula has separate dialects for men and women.
  • In Japanese also, certain synonyms are used by men and women with different frequency, or conveying different connotations. However, there's no systematic inflectional relation between male and female words, nor any form of agreement, and their literal meaning doesn't change with gender. See Gender differences in spoken Japanese for further information.

    List of languages by type of grammatical genders


    Masculine and feminine

  • Albanian The neuter has almost disappeared.
  • Akkadian
  • Ancient Egyptian
  • Amharic
  • Arabic However, Arabic distinguishes masculine and feminine in the singular and the dual. In the plural it distinguishes between male humans, female humans and non-human plurals (including collectives of humans, such as "nation," "people," etc.), non-human plurals being feminine singular, no matter their gender in the singular.
  • Aramaic
  • Catalan
  • Coptic
  • Corsican
  • French
  • Galician
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Irish
  • Italian There is a trace of the neuter in some nouns and personal pronouns.
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian There is a neuter gender for adjectives with very limited usage and set of forms.
  • Manchu Used vowel harmony in gender inflections.
  • Occitan
  • Portuguese There is a trace of the neuter in the demonstratives and some indefinite pronouns.
  • Punjabi
  • Sardinian
  • Scottish Gaelic
  • Sicilian
  • Spanish There is a neuter of sorts, though generally expressed only with the definite article lo, used with nouns denoting abstract categories: lo bueno.
  • Tamazight (Berber)
  • Telugu
  • Urdu
  • Welsh

    Common and neuter

  • Danish
  • Dutch The masculine and the feminine have merged into a common gender in standard Dutch, but a distinction is still made by many when using pronouns, and in some dialects: see gender in Dutch grammar.
  • Low German
  • Norwegian (Riksmål, and the dialect of Bergen)
  • Swedish

    Animate and inanimate

  • Hittite
  • Many Native American languages, such as Navajo and Mapudungun
  • Sumerian
  • Basque: two different paradigms of noun declension are used. Adjectives and demonstratives don't show gender however.

    Masculine, feminine, and neuter

  • Asturian
  • Belarusian
  • Bengali
  • Bosnian
  • Bulgarian
  • Croatian
  • Dutch The masculine and the feminine have merged into a common gender in standard Dutch, but a distinction is still made by many when using pronouns, and in some dialects: see gender in Dutch grammar.
  • Faroese
  • Gaulish
  • German
  • Greek
  • Gujarati
  • Icelandic
  • Kannada
  • Latin
  • Macedonian
  • Marathi
  • Norwegian The feminine gender is largely superfluous in Norwegian. Many dialects allow feminine nouns to be treated as masculine -- for example, given the corresponding masculine inflections. Some dialects don't use the feminine gender at all.
  • Old English
  • Old Irish
  • Old Prussian
  • Polish
  • Romanian The neuter gender (called ambigen in Romanian) has no separate forms of its own; neuter nouns carry masculine suffixes in the singular, and feminine suffixes in the plural.
  • Russian
  • Sanskrit
  • Serbian
  • Serbo-Croatian
  • Slovak
  • Slovenian
  • Sorbian
  • Swedish Like in Dutch, the masculine and the feminine have merged into a common gender in standard Swedish. But dialects, mainly in Dalecarlia, Ostrobothnia (Finland) and northern Sweden have preserved three genders in spoken language.
  • Ukrainian
  • Yiddish

    More than three grammatical genders

  • Czech: Masculine animate, Masculine inanimate, Feminine, Neuter.
  • Dyirbal: Masculine, feminine, vegetal and other. (Some linguists don't regard the noun class system of this language as grammatical gender.)
  • Luganda: ten classes called simply Class I to Class X and containing all sorts of arbitrary groupings but often characterised as people, long objects, animals, miscellaneous objects, large objects and liquids, small objects, languages, pejoratives, infinitives, mass nouns
  • Polish: Personal masculine, animate masculine, inanimate masculine, feminine, and neuter (some approaches only recognize three genders).
  • Tamil: Gender highly correlated with number - Animate masculine singular, Animate feminine singular, Animate plural, Inanimate singular and inanimate plural.
  • Zande: Masculine, feminine, animate, and inanimate.

    No grammatical genders

    See Noun class: languages without noun classes or grammatical genders.

    Further Information

    Get more info on 'Grammatical Gender'.


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