gender
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- (grammar: grammatical gender): g. (abbreviation)
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈd͡ʒɛndə/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈd͡ʒɛndɚ/
Audio (Southern England): (file) Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -ɛndə(ɹ)
- Hyphenation: gen‧der
Etymology 1
[edit]From Middle English gendre, borrowed from Old French gendre, borrowed from Latin genere (“type, kind”). Doublet of genre and genus. The verb developed after the noun.
Noun
[edit]gender (countable and uncountable, plural genders)
- (obsolete) Class; kind. [14th–19th c.]
- c. 1603–1604 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Othello, the Moore of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act I, scene iii]:
- […] plant nettles or sow lettuce, set hyssop and weed up thyme, supply it with one gender of herbs or distract it with many […]
- (now sometimes proscribed) Sex (a category, either male or female, into which sexually-reproducing organisms are divided on the basis of their reproductive roles in their species). [from 15th c.]
- the gene is activated in both genders
- The effect of the medication is dependent upon age, gender, and other factors.
- 1723, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, letter, 7 December:
- To say truth, I have never had any great esteem for the generality of the fair sex; and my only consolation for being of that gender has been the assurance it gave me of never being married to any one among them […] .
- 1849 May – 1850 November, Charles Dickens, The Personal History of David Copperfield, London: Bradbury & Evans, […], published 1850, →OCLC:
- In consideration of the day and hour of my birth, it was declared by the nurse […] that I was destined to be unlucky in life; and secondly, that I was privileged to see ghosts and spirits; both these gifts inevitably attaching, as they believed, to all unlucky infants of either gender, born towards the small hours on a Friday night.
- 2004, Wenona Mary Giles, Jennifer Hyndman, Sites of violence: gender and conflict zones, page 28:
- Gender does not necessarily have primacy in this respect. Economic class and ethnic differentiation can also be important relational hierarchies, […] .
- 2008, BioWare, Mass Effect (Science Fiction), Redwood City: Electronic Arts, →ISBN, →OCLC, PC, scene: Asari: Biology Codex entry:
- Although asari have one gender, they are not asexual. An asari provides two copies of her own genes to her offspring. The second set is altered in a unique process called melding.
During melding, an asari consciously attunes her nervous system to her partner's, sending and receiving electrical impulses directly through the skin. The partner can be another asari, or an alien of either gender. Effectively, the asari and her partner briefly become one unified nervous system.
- Identification as a man, a woman, or something else, and association with a (social) role or set of behavioral and cultural traits, clothing, etc; a category to which a person belongs on this basis. (Compare gender role, gender identity.) [from 20th c.]
- 1979 January 8, Merissa Sherrill Lynn, “Statement”, in Newsletter[1], number 7, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 1:
- I am a cross-dresser by pleasure and inclination, a transgenderal person. To me for human beings to express themselves along gender lines is a wonderful and uniquely human phenomena.
- 1989, Sue-Ellen Jacobs, Christine Roberts, “Sex, Sexuality, Gender, and Gender Variance”, in Sandra Morgen, editor, Gender and Anthropology: Critical Reviews for Research and Teaching[2], Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 439:
- Gender is the sociocultural designation of biobehavioral and psychosocial qualities of the sexes; for example, woman (female), man (male), other(s) (e.g., berdaches²). Notions of gender are culturally specific and depend on the ways in which cultures define and differentiate human (and other) potentials and possibilities. While many people in Western society may think first of heterosexual women and men when the word "gender" is mentioned, there are more gender possibilities than just those two.
- 1998, Ching Kwan Lee, Gender and the South China Miracle[3], University of California Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 23:
- From simply "adding women" into the analysis of work and seeing "gender" as another word for "sex," we have moved to the understanding that gender is a social process and a social construction of sexual differences. It is as much an independent variable as a dependent variable, shaped by social and historical processes. Beyond bringing women back into analyses of the workplace and the labor process, we now have to analyze how work is gendered and gendering: gender as a means of control and an organizing principle for class relations at the point of production, and workplace as a site for gender construction, formation, and reproduction. In the latest development, seeing gender as a power process also directs our attention toward the politics of identity, or the formation and claiming of collective subjectivities.
- 2007, Helen Boyd, She's Not the Man I Married: My Life with a Transgender Husband, →ISBN, page 93:
- One wife I met at a conference was in a hurry for her husband to have the genital surgery because she worried about his gender and genitals not matching if he were in a car accident, […]
- 2010, Eve Shapiro, Gender Circuits: Bodies and Identities in a Technological Age, →ISBN:
- Thomas Beatie, a transgendered man, announced in an April 2008 issue of the gay and lesbian news magazine, The Advocate, that he was pregnant. […] Moreover, he saw no conflict between his gender and his pregnancy.
- 2012, Elizabeth Reis, American Sexual Histories, page 5:
- Intersex people too challenge the idea that physical sex, not merely gender, is binary – a person must be definitively either one sex or the other.
- (grammar) A division of nouns and pronouns (and sometimes of other parts of speech) into masculine or feminine, and sometimes other categories like neuter or common, and animate or inanimate. [from 14th c.]
- 1990, Edwin L. Battistella, Markedness: The Evaluative Superstructure of Language, →ISBN, page 73:
- The pronominal declension [of English], on which we will focus most of our attention, inflects pronouns for person, number, case, gender, animacy, and reflexivity.
- 1991, Greville G. Corbett, Gender, →ISBN, pages 22 and 65:
- In Algonquian languages, given the full morphology of a noun, one can predict whether it belongs to the animate or inanimate gender […]
- 2006, Viktor Elšik, Yaron Matras, Markedness and Language Change: The Romani Sample, →ISBN, page 29:
- Pronouns, for instance, are structures that organise information about continuous referents. This information is typically categorised in Romani according to Person, Number, Gender, Animacy, Case, and Discreteness.
- 2015, Anna Giacalone Ramat, Paolo Ramat, The Indo-European Languages, →ISBN, page 191:
- The common gender might well reflect an IE animate gender.
- (grammar) Synonym of voice (“particular way of inflecting or conjugating verbs”)
- 1835, James Paul Cobbett, A Latin Grammar for the Use of English Boys: Being an Explanation of the Rudiments of the Latin Language, London, page 111:
- 143. […] We have now to speak of the following eight particulars relating to verbs: Gender or Sort, Person, Number, Time, Mode, Participle, Gerund, and Supine. [...]
1st.--Of the Gender.
144. Gender means the same as sort or kind. There are four principal Sorts of Verbs; namely, Active verbs, Passive verbs, Neuter verbs, and Impersonal verbs.
- 1866, Guðbrandr Vigfusson, “Some remarks upon the Use of the Reflexive Pronoun in Icelandic”, in Transactions of the Philological Society, page 87:
- Many of the words quoted are purely reflexive, others passive or deponent. Such words as óttask, œðrask, dásk, iðrask, reiðask are deponent, though they originally may have been reflexive, but the active gender is here quite obsolete.
- 2007, Bernard Colombat, “Some Problems in Transferring the Latin Model to the First French Grammars: Verbal voice, impersonal verbs and the -rais form”, in Eduardo Guimarães, Diana Luz Pessoa de Barros, editors, Studies in the History of the Language Sciences 110: History of Linguistics 2002, John Benjamins Publishing Company, page 6:
- The general distinction is between three 'genders' out of the five genders of the Latin tradition: active gender, passive gender, neuter gender.
- (hardware) The quality which distinguishes connectors, which may be male (fitting into another connector) and female (having another connector fit into it), or genderless or androgynous (capable of fitting together with another connector of the same type). [from 20th c.]
- 2015, Ron Carswell, Shen Jiang, Mary Ellen Hardee, Guide to Parallel Operating Systems with Windows 10 and Linux, page 10:
- Connectors are identified by gender. When copper pins are exposed in the connector, its gender is male.
Usage notes
[edit]Sometimes, sex and gender are distinguished.
Synonyms
[edit]Derived terms
[edit]- agender
- all-gender
- ambigender
- antigender
- anti-gender
- antigenderism
- antigenderist
- autigender
- bigender
- biogender
- cisgender
- cis-gender
- cogender
- common gender
- crossgender
- demigender
- fourth gender
- genderable
- gender affirmation surgery
- gender-affirming
- gender-affirming surgery
- genderal
- gender asterisk
- gender-baiting
- gender baiting
- gender-balanced
- genderbend
- gender-bender
- gender bender
- genderbending
- gender bias
- gender binary
- gender blind
- gender-blind
- genderbread person
- gender card
- gender changer
- gendercide
- gender cleavage
- gender confirmation surgery
- gender continuum
- gender-critical
- gender critical
- gender-critical feminism
- gender-critical feminist
- gender diverse
- gender dysphoria
- gender-dysphoric
- gendered
- gender envy
- genderer
- gender euphoria
- gender-expansive
- gender expression
- genderfae
- gender-flip
- genderfluid
- gender-fluid
- gender fluidity
- genderflux
- gender-free
- genderfuck
- gender gap
- genderic
- gender identity
- gender identity disorder; GID
- gender identity syndrome
- gender ideology
- gender-inclusive
- gender inclusivity
- gender incongruence
- genderisation
- genderism
- genderist
- genderization
- genderize
- genderland
- genderlect
- genderless
- genderlike
- genderly
- gender mainstreaming
- gender mender
- gender minority
- gender neutral
- gender-neutral
- gender neutrality
- gender-neutrality
- gender-neutralize
- gender-neutrally
- gender-nonconforming
- gender nonconforming
- gender non-conforming
- gender nonconformity
- genderology
- gender panembung
- genderphobia
- genderplay
- gender presentation
- genderpunk
- genderquake
- genderqueer; GQ
- gender reallocation surgery
- gender reassignment
- gender reveal
- gender-role
- gender role
- gender-safe
- genderscape
- gendersex
- genderspeak
- genderspecial
- gender-specific
- gender-specifically
- gender spectrum
- gender star
- gender studies
- gender swap
- genderswap
- genderswapping
- gender-swapping
- gender swaps
- gender theory
- gender transition
- gendertrash
- gender vague
- gendervague
- gender-vague
- gender-variant
- genderwise
- gendie
- grammatical gender
- heterogender
- homogender
- hypergender
- intergender
- intragender
- ipso gender
- legal gender
- like-gendered
- metagender
- meta-gender
- monogender
- multigender
- natural gender
- neurogender
- nongender
- omnigender
- pangender
- pan-gender
- play the gender card
- polygender
- postgender
- pregender
- psychogender
- rapid-onset gender dysphoria
- rapid onset gender dysphoria
- same-gender-loving
- same gender loving
- same-gender marriage
- sexual orientation and gender identity change efforts
- subgender
- third gender
- transgender; TG
- trans someone's gender
- trigender
- xenogender
- xgender
Descendants
[edit]- → Arabic: جِنْدَر (jindar)
- → Armenian: գենդեր (gender)
- → Belarusian: ге́ндар (hjéndar), ге́ндэр (hjénder)
- → Bulgarian: дже́ндър (džéndǎr)
- → Czech: gender
- → Dutch: gender
- → Esperanto: genro (semantic loan)
- → French: genre (semantic loan)
- → Georgian: გენდერი (genderi)
- → German: Gender
- → Hungarian: gender
- → Indonesian: gèndêr
- → Japanese: ジェンダー (jendā)
- → Korean: 젠더 (jendeo)
- → Polish: gender
- → Russian: ге́ндер (géndɛr)
- → Slovak: gender
- → Ukrainian: ге́ндер (hénder), ґе́ндер (génder)
- → Yiddish: דזשענדער (dzhender)
Translations
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
See also
[edit]- (sex) female, male, hermaphroditic; man, woman, hermaphrodite
- (identification) genderqueer, bigender, non-binary, transgender, androgyne, crossdresser, hijra, kathoey, transsexual, two-spirit
- (grammar) common, feminine, masculine, neuter
Verb
[edit]gender (third-person singular simple present genders, present participle gendering, simple past and past participle gendered)
- (sociology) To assign a gender to (a person); to perceive as having a gender; to address using terms (pronouns, nouns, adjectives...) that express a certain gender.
- 2011, Kristen Schilt, Just One of the Guys?: Transgender Men and the Persistence of Gender Inequality, page 147:
- In an interview, he even noted that he "dressed, acted and thought like a man" for years, but his coworkers continued to gender him as female (Shaver 1995, 2).
- (sociology) To perceive (a thing) as having characteristics associated with a certain gender, or as having been authored by someone of a certain gender.
- 1996, Athalya Brenner, A Feminist Companion to the Hebrew Bible in the New Testament, page 191:
- At the same time, however, the convictions they held about how a woman or man might write led them to interpret their findings in a rather androcentric fashion, and to gender the text accordingly.
- 1997, Cheryl Glenn, Rhetoric Retold, page 120:
- Like every Western culture preceding it, Renaissance society was gendered to the advantage of the adult male, who served as the template for all of humankind, women and children having been misstamped for other uses.
- 2003, “Reading the Anonymous Female Voice”, in The Anonymous Renaissance: Cultures of Discretion in Tudor-Stuart England, page 244:
- Yet because texts by “female authors” are not dependent on the voice to gender the text, the topics that they address and the traditions that they employ seem broader and somewhat less constrained by gender stereotypes.
- 2019 May 22, Megan Specia, “Siri and Alexa Reinforce Gender Bias, U.N. Finds”, in New York Times[4]:
- “Obedient and obliging machines that pretend to be women are entering our homes, cars and offices,” Saniye Gulser Corat, Unesco’s director for gender equality, said in a statement. “The world needs to pay much closer attention to how, when and whether A.I. technologies are gendered and, crucially, who is gendering them.”
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]
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Adjective
[edit]gender (comparative more gender, superlative most gender)
- (transgender slang) Evoking positive feelings regarding gender, like gender euphoria or gender envy.
- This outfit I'm wearing feels gender as hell, it's incredible that I get to look this hot.
- 2021 July 6, @chromaticamber, Twitter[5], archived from the original on 2024-08-31:
- miles [Morales] is so gender and the embodiment of a little guy I just want to give him a hug
- 2021 July 6, @godrustler, Twitter[6], archived from the original on 2024-08-31:
- Seth Rogan eating the whole chicken drumstick off the bone and then asking how he’s still single is gender af
- 2023 March 13, @FTMLUCIO, Twitter[7], archived from the original on 2024-08-31:
- ombras "whats good?" and "peace 😈" voicelines are so gender and i love her
- 2023 December 31, @pyrotato, Twitter[8], archived from the original on 2024-08-31:
- you draw her so gender, thank you i'm die forever
- 2024 May 31, @BurnJonJonBurn, Twitter[9], archived from the original on 2024-08-31:
- Whenever I work triceps at the gym I feel most Gender (tm).
- 2024 August 23, official-linguistics-post, “Archived copy”, in Tumblr[10] (blog), archived from the original on 30 August 2024:
- Is there anything surprising that makes you feel gender/that you are envious of? ¶ oooh. i recently discovered the big gender mood of shirts cropped to precisely the right length, and it is also surprisingly gender when my friends call me “doc” instead of my very binarily gendered name
Etymology 2
[edit]From Middle English gendren, genderen, from Middle French gendrer, from Latin generāre.
Verb
[edit]gender (third-person singular simple present genders, present participle gendering, simple past and past participle gendered)
- (archaic) To engender.
- 1854, Robert Gordon (D.D., Minister of the Free High Church, Edinburgh.), Christ as Made Known to the Ancient Church: an Exposition of the Revelation of Divine Grace, as Unfolded in the Old Testament Scriptures, page 400:
- […] being a stranger to those restrictions which were afterwards laid on his posterity by the Mosaic law, and which gendered a servile frame of spirit.
- 1893, The Academy and Literature, page 71:
- Our whole life was passed in public, which gendered a sympathy and good fellowship that always distinguishes Wykehamists from the rest of mankind.
- 1854, Robert Gordon (D.D., Minister of the Free High Church, Edinburgh.), Christ as Made Known to the Ancient Church: an Exposition of the Revelation of Divine Grace, as Unfolded in the Old Testament Scriptures, page 400:
- (archaic or obsolete) To breed.
- Leviticus 19:19 (KJV):
- Ye shall keep my statutes. Thou shalt not let thy cattle gender with a diverse kind: thou shalt not sow thy field with mingled seed: neither shall a garment mingled of linen and woollen come upon thee.
- 1896, John Todhunter, Three Irish Bardic Tales: Being Metrical Versions of the Three Tales Known as the Three Sorrows of Story-telling, page 11:
- Fear in the witch's heart was gendering with her hate,
Seeing her evil thought grown to an evil deed, […]
- Leviticus 19:19 (KJV):
Translations
[edit]Etymology 3
[edit]Borrowed from Indonesian gender, from Javanese ꦒꦼꦤ꧀ꦢꦺꦂ (gendèr), from Old Javanese gĕnder.
Alternative forms
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]gender (plural genders)
- An Indonesian musical instrument resembling a xylophone, used in gamelan music.
Further reading
[edit]- gender in Keywords for Today: A 21st Century Vocabulary, edited by The Keywords Project, Colin MacCabe, Holly Yanacek, 2018.
- “gender”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
- “gender”, in Collins English Dictionary.
- “gender, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- “gender”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- “gender”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- “gender” in TheFreeDictionary.com, Huntingdon Valley, Pa.: Farlex, Inc., 2003–2024.
Anagrams
[edit]Dutch
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from English gender. Doublet of genre and genus.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]gender m or n (plural genders)
- gender (mental analog of sex)
Usage notes
[edit]Dutch lacks words to distinguish gender from sex, using the words geslacht or sekse to encompass both concepts. The term gender in Dutch has been recently introduced for cases when a clear distinction is needed, such as in the distinction between transgender (feeling oneself to be different from one's birth sex) and transsexual (having or desiring the sexual organs of the sex opposite to those one had at birth).
Related terms
[edit]German
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio: (file)
Verb
[edit]gender
- inflection of gendern:
Indonesian
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Internationalism, unadapted borrowing from English gender, from Middle English gendre, gender (see also gendres), from Middle French gendre, genre, from Latin genus (“kind, sort”). Doublet of genus, genre, and jenis.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]gèndêr (plural gender-gender)
- gender:
- sex (a category, either male or female, into which sexually-reproducing organisms are divided on the basis of their reproductive roles in their species).
- Synonyms: jantina, jenis kelamin, kelamin, seks
- Identification as a man, a woman, or something else, and association with a (social) role or set of behavioral and cultural traits, clothing, etc; a category to which a person belongs on this basis.
- sex (a category, either male or female, into which sexually-reproducing organisms are divided on the basis of their reproductive roles in their species).
Etymology 2
[edit]Borrowed from Javanese ꦒꦼꦤ꧀ꦢꦺꦂ (gendèr), from Old Javanese gĕnder.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]gêndèr (plural gender-gender)
- (music) An Javanese gamelan instrument.
Further reading
[edit]- “gender” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
Polish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unadapted borrowing from English gender.
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]gender (not comparable, no derived adverb)
- (humanities, relational) genderism
- Synonym: genderowy
Noun
[edit]gender m inan (indeclinable)
- gender (identification as a man, a woman, or something else)
- (humanities) gender studies, genderism
- Synonyms: gender studies, genderyzm
Declension
[edit]Indeclinable
or
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- English 2-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/ɛndə(ɹ)
- Rhymes:English/ɛndə(ɹ)/2 syllables
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *ǵenh₁-
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Old French
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms derived from Latin
- English doublets
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with obsolete senses
- English terms with quotations
- English proscribed terms
- en:Grammar
- English verbs
- en:Sociology
- English adjectives
- English transgender slang
- English terms with usage examples
- English terms derived from Middle French
- English terms with archaic senses
- English terms borrowed from Indonesian
- English terms derived from Indonesian
- English terms derived from Javanese
- English terms derived from Old Javanese
- Dutch terms borrowed from English
- Dutch terms derived from English
- Dutch doublets
- Dutch terms with IPA pronunciation
- Dutch terms with audio pronunciation
- Dutch lemmas
- Dutch nouns
- Dutch nouns with plural in -s
- Dutch masculine nouns
- Dutch neuter nouns
- Dutch nouns with multiple genders
- nl:Gender
- German terms with audio pronunciation
- German non-lemma forms
- German verb forms
- Indonesian internationalisms
- Indonesian terms borrowed from English
- Indonesian unadapted borrowings from English
- Indonesian terms derived from English
- Indonesian terms derived from Middle English
- Indonesian terms derived from Middle French
- Indonesian terms derived from Latin
- Indonesian doublets
- Indonesian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Indonesian/dər
- Rhymes:Indonesian/dər/2 syllables
- Rhymes:Indonesian/ər
- Rhymes:Indonesian/ər/2 syllables
- Rhymes:Indonesian/r
- Rhymes:Indonesian/r/2 syllables
- Indonesian lemmas
- Indonesian nouns
- Indonesian terms borrowed from Javanese
- Indonesian terms derived from Javanese
- Indonesian terms derived from Old Javanese
- Rhymes:Indonesian/dɛr
- Rhymes:Indonesian/dɛr/2 syllables
- Rhymes:Indonesian/ɛr
- Rhymes:Indonesian/ɛr/2 syllables
- id:Music
- Polish terms derived from Middle English
- Polish terms derived from Middle French
- Polish terms derived from Latin
- Polish terms borrowed from English
- Polish unadapted borrowings from English
- Polish terms derived from English
- Polish 2-syllable words
- Polish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Polish terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:Polish/ɛndɛr
- Rhymes:Polish/ɛndɛr/2 syllables
- Polish lemmas
- Polish adjectives
- Polish uncomparable adjectives
- pl:Humanities
- Polish relational adjectives
- Polish nouns
- Polish indeclinable nouns
- Polish masculine nouns
- Polish inanimate nouns
- pl:Gender