♀
Appearance
Text style | Emoji style | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
♀︎ | ♀️ | |||||||
Text style is forced with ⟨︎⟩ and emoji style with ⟨️⟩. | ||||||||
|
Translingual
[edit]Etymology
[edit]A (copper/bronze) handmirror, symbol of the Greek goddess Aphrodite (and her Roman equivalent Venus). The cross was added in the 16th century to Christianize the symbol of a pagan god.
Symbol
[edit]♀︎
- (biology) female.
- 1990, Charles S. Churcher, “Cranial Appendages of Giraffoidea”, George A. Bubenik, Anthony B. Bubenik, Horns, Pronghorns, and Antlers: Evolution, Morphology, Physiology, and Social Significance, New York: Springer-Verlag, →ISBN, chapter 1.5, page 183:
- Figure 2. Ossicones, secondary ossification, and sinuses of Giraffa: A Lateral aspect of skull showing courses of veins, areas of dense ossification (heavily stippled) and lesser secondary ossification (lightly stippled), and outlines of skull roofs of male (♂) and female (♀) adults. (After Spinage 1968b.)
- (botany, of a flower) pistillate, carpellate.
- (astronomy, astrology) Venus.
- (alchemy) copper.
- (rare) Friday.
- Refers to the Latin phrase dies Veneris, which literally means "Venus's day".
Antonyms
[edit]- (biology): ♂
Derived terms
[edit]- (alchemy): 🜠 (copper ore)
- 🜡 (copper-and-iron ore)
- 🜢 (sublimate of copper)
- 🜣 (crocus of copper)
- 🜥 (copper antimoniate)
- ♀⃞ (copper foil)
- (gender): ⚢ (lesbian)
- ⚤ (heterosexual)
- (botany): ♀-♂ (monoecious)
- ♀:♂ (dioecious)
Gallery
[edit]-
Late Classical and Medieval forms of the astronomical symbol
-
Classical form of the symbol, ⚲
-
A decorative variant in the Netherlands
-
As a symbol for copper
-
An abstract variant
-
Symbol on a pale-copper background
-
Transit of Venus
-
1901 cover for Japanese literary magazine Myōjō
-
1995 UN conference on women
-
Feminism/woman-power symbol
-
... on a flag
-
Women's health
-
Pregnant female
Related terms
[edit]See also
[edit]- Gender symbol on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Latin
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]♀ m sg (genitive ♀ris); third declension
- (alchemy) Abbreviation of Venus.
- 1701, Johann Christoph Sommerhoff, Lexicon pharmaceutico-chymicum latino-germanicum & germanico-latinum [Pharmaceutico-Chemical Lexicon, Latin–German and German–Latin], page 399:
- Arte ſivè Chymice parata: ut Vitriolum ♃vis, ☽næ, ♂tis, ☉lis, ♀ris
- Those prepared by art or chemically: as vitriol of Jupiter, of the Moon, of Mars, of the Sun, of Venus
Declension
[edit]Third-declension noun.
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | ♀ | ♀rēs |
genitive | ♀ris | ♀rum |
dative | ♀rī | ♀ribus |
accusative | ♀rem | ♀rēs |
ablative | ♀re | ♀ribus |
vocative | ♀ | ♀rēs |
Third-declension noun.
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | ♀ | ♀ēs |
genitive | ♀is | ♀um |
dative | ♀ī | ♀ibus |
accusative | ♀em | ♀ēs |
ablative | ♀e | ♀ibus |
vocative | ♀ | ♀ēs |
Derived terms
[edit]Categories:
- Character boxes with images
- Miscellaneous Symbols block
- Symbolic script characters
- Translingual lemmas
- Translingual symbols
- mul:Biology
- Translingual terms with quotations
- mul:Botany
- mul:Astronomy
- mul:Astrology
- mul:Alchemy
- Translingual terms with rare senses
- Latin lemmas
- Latin proper nouns
- Latin third declension nouns
- Latin masculine nouns in the third declension
- Latin masculine nouns
- la:Alchemy
- Latin abbreviations
- Latin terms with quotations
- Astronomical symbols
- mul:Female
- mul:Planets of the Solar System
- mul:Days of the week