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sinjoriĉo

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Esperanto

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Etymology

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From sinjoro (sir, reconstrued as ‘sir or madam’) +‎ -iĉo (male).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): [sinjoˈrit͡ʃo]
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -it͡ʃo
  • Hyphenation: sin‧jo‧ri‧ĉo

Noun

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sinjoriĉo (accusative singular sinjoriĉon, plural sinjoriĉoj, accusative plural sinjoriĉojn)

  1. (neologism, nonstandard, proscribed) sir
    Synonym: sinjoro
    Coordinate term: sinjorino

Usage notes

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The neologistic suffix -iĉo is controversial, but even among its proponents the word sinjoriĉo is commonly not recommended. The word sinjoro traditionally already means “sir” even without the addition of the masculine suffix -iĉo, making the suffix redundant.

Many users of the term believe that the meaning of sinjoro (and other gendered root words) should be changed to have a gender neutral meaning. Other people that actively use it do not aim to change the traditional meaning of “sinjoro”, but think the redundancy of -iĉo is preferable to the asymmetry between the forms sinjoro (sir) and sinjorino (madam, miss).

See also Gender reform in Esperanto and its section Masculine suffixes on Wikipedia, and the article on -iĉ- in Esperanto.