Gender, Know Your English

All of us know that there are two types of living beings, viz; male and Female (Eunuchs is a different class) – Currently they are treated neither as male or female.

There are certain physical and mental characteristic that differentiates a Male and a Female.

A Noun that denotes a male is said to be in Masculine Gender. (Boy, Man, Lion, Tiger).

A Noun that denotes a female is said to be in Feminine Gender. (Girl, Woman, Lioness, Tigress).

A Noun that is without life (when we cannot ascribe masculine or feminine) is said to be in NEUTER Gender. NEUTER means neither Male nor Female. (Car, Pen, Computer).

Sometimes, over a period of time, some things are personified as Masculine or Feminine Gender, even though they belong to NEUTER GENDER.

Moon and Earth – Feminine Gender

Sun, Time, Death – Masculine Gender

FORMING THE FEMININE OF NOUNS (entirely different words)

Wizard – Witch

Nephew – Niece

Lord – Lady

Drone – Bee

Dog – Bitch

Gentle Man – Lady

(Adding – ess)

Host – Hostess Poet – Poetess

Giant – Giantess Shepherd – Shepherdess

Normally, we can use ‘ess’ suffix to Masculine to form Feminine Gender or ’ine’ as in Hero – Heroine or by placing a word before or after. Washer man – Washerwoman, Grand father, Grand mother.

Related:

http://ramanisblog.in/2012/08/24/kinds-of-nouns-know-your-english/

Comments

2 responses to “Gender, Know Your English”

  1. Laura Avatar

    I found this post rather interesting. I think I’m seeing what is probably a cultural difference. I’m in the U.S., and creating “feminine” nouns by adding “ess” or “ine” is considered very sexist, outdated, and insulting to women. There is definitely a movement to remove the distinction in writing and speech; waiter and waitress are being replaced by server or wait staff. Certainly, you’d never read of a poetess or an authoress; they are poets and authors. Even actress is slowly disappearing from our vocabulary.

    1. ramanan50 Avatar

      Even here this change exists.
      ‘Actor, Actress’ is replaced by ‘Artistes’, ‘batsman, bats-woman’ as ‘Batter’
      I am writing with only Grammar in mind.that’s all.
      Personally speaking I do not see anything sexist in the earlier terms for these ideas never crossed my mind then and nor do they even now.
      Please post your views and any corrections in the series ‘Grammar’.
      Thank you

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