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  2. Gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender

    Analysis of more than 30 million academic article titles from 1945 to 2001 showed that the uses of the term "gender", were much rarer than uses of "sex", was often used as a grammatical category early in this period. By the end of this period, uses of "gender" outnumbered uses of "sex" in the social sciences, arts, and humanities. [1]

  3. Gender in English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_in_English

    Old English grammatical gender was, as in other Germanic languages, remarkably opaque: that is, one often could not know the gender of a noun by its meaning or by the form of the word; this was especially true for nouns referencing inanimate objects. Learners would have had to simply memorize which word has which gender.

  4. Sex–gender distinction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex–gender_distinction

    The term gender is sometimes used by linguists to refer to social gender as well as grammatical gender. [103] Some languages, such as German or Finnish, have no separate words for sex and gender. German, for example, uses "Biologisches Geschlecht" for biological sex, and "Soziales Geschlecht" for gender when making this distinction. [104]

  5. The bill from Rep. Julianne Young would define “gender” as a synonym for “sex” and not as “a synonym for gender identity, an internal sense of gender, experienced gender, gender ...

  6. Grammatical gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_gender

    The default assignment is the borrowing language's unmarked gender. Rarely, the word retains the gender it had in the donor language. This tends to happen more frequently in more formal language such as scientific terms, where some knowledge of the donor language can be expected. Sometimes the gender of a word switches with time. For example ...

  7. Gender: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender:_A_Useful_Category...

    Scott then provides her own definition of gender in two parts: gender is based on the perceived differences between the sexes, but is also a way of signifying power differentials. [4] This second part of the definition is, according to William Sewell, "important and contentious", making a claim for the importance of gender in all areas of ...

  8. Sociology of gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_gender

    During the 1970s, there was no consensus about how the terms were to be applied. In the 1974 edition of Masculine/Feminine or Human, the author uses "innate gender" and "learned sex roles", but in the 1978 edition, the use of sex and gender is reversed. By 1980, most feminist writings had agreed on using gender only for sociocultural adapted ...

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