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  2. The debate between woman versus female - Washburn Review

    washburnreview.org/43125/features/the-debate...

    Gender and sex are interchangeable and always have been, because they are the same. Female is not a derogatory term, and neither is male. Both just used depending on the context. For example, I am male by biology, and the term Man or woman are just used for a different purpose or different setting.

  3. Women vs. Woman: What's the Difference? - Grammarly

    www.grammarly.com/.../women-vs-woman

    Women vs. Woman in a nutshell. To summarize, woman refers to a single adult human female, while women is the plural form indicating more than one adult human female. Correctly distinguishing between these words is essential for clear communication.

  4. Using 'Lady,' 'Woman,' and 'Female' to Modify Nouns

    www.merriam-webster.com/.../lady-woman-female-usage

    When choosing between female and woman as modifiers, the usage advice is split. Some advocate for woman: Although it is generally preferable to use woman or women as adjectives... but allow that female is also an adequate choice:... there will be times when female seems more appropriate.

  5. What Do We Mean By Sex and Gender? - Yale School of Medicine

    medicine.yale.edu/news-article/what-do-we-mean...

    Moreover, while an individual’s internal sense of gender can be female or male, some people identify as nonbinary — neither female nor male. Other individuals can identify as a gender that is the same as (cisgender) or different from (transgender) the one assigned at birth.

  6. What’s the Difference Between Sex and Gender? - WebMD

    www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/difference-between...

    Medically, there are three possible sexes assigned at birth: female, intersex, and male. Female. A person whose sex is female typically has the following traits: Two X sex chromosomes; Ovaries

  7. When you should use female, woman, or lady as an adjective: A ...

    slate.com/podcasts/lexicon-valley/2016/02/when...

    As William Safire explained in a 2007 column, woman used adjectively “is what the O.E.D. labels an apposite noun—explaining, even identifying, the noun it ‘stands next to’—but syntactically...

  8. Female Trouble: The Debate Over “Woman” as an Adjective

    www.newyorker.com/culture/comma-queen/female...

    Champions of old-school grammar insist that “woman” is a noun and that it is wrong to use a noun as an adjective when the language already has a perfectly good adjective in the word “female.”...