Difference between revisions of "Grammatical gender"

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(Created page with "==Translations== genere (grammaticale) | genre (grammatical) | Genus ==Article== Grammatical gender is a grammatical property, which assigns morphological paradigmatic series...")
 
 
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==Article==
 
==Article==
Grammatical gender is a grammatical property, which assigns morphological paradigmatic series to groups (cf. Corbett 1991, 4) based on criteria that partly rely on semantic properties (the so-called natural gender) and that has reflections on syntactic patterns such as alignment. When a word is [[borrowing|borrowed]], it requires re-encoding in order to be adapted to the morphology of the target language: this re-encoding includes the [[gender assignment (contact) | assignment of a gender]], provided that the target language has gender categories.
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Grammatical gender is a grammatical property, which assigns morphological paradigmatic series to groups (cf. Corbett 1991, 4) based on criteria that partly rely on semantic properties (the so-called natural gender) and that has reflections on syntactic patterns such as alignment. When a word is [[borrowing|borrowed]], it requires re-encoding in order to be adapted to the morphology of the target language: this re-encoding includes the [[grammatical gender assignment (contact) | assignment of a gender]], provided that the target language has gender categories.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
Corbett, G.G. 1991. Gender, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
 
Corbett, G.G. 1991. Gender, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Latest revision as of 16:17, 21 August 2020

Translations

genere (grammaticale) | genre (grammatical) | Genus

Article

Grammatical gender is a grammatical property, which assigns morphological paradigmatic series to groups (cf. Corbett 1991, 4) based on criteria that partly rely on semantic properties (the so-called natural gender) and that has reflections on syntactic patterns such as alignment. When a word is borrowed, it requires re-encoding in order to be adapted to the morphology of the target language: this re-encoding includes the assignment of a gender, provided that the target language has gender categories.

References

Corbett, G.G. 1991. Gender, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.