美文网首页
Nouns and gender

Nouns and gender

作者: 游文影月志 | 来源:发表于2024-01-09 13:53 被阅读0次

    Most English nouns do not have grammatical gender. Nouns referring to people do not have separate forms for men (male form) and women (female form). However, some nouns traditionally had different forms. Nowadays, people usually prefer more neutral forms.

    Male Form Female Form Neutral Form
    actor actress actor
    chairman chairwoman chair or chairperson
    fireman firefighter
    headmaster headmistress headteacher or head
    host hostess (social) host
    (on an aircraft) cabin attendant
    policeman policewoman police officer
    steward stewardess (on an aircraft) cabin attendant
    waiter waitress waiter

    Traditional work-roles

    Some jobs were normally done by men in the past, and their names had no form for women (e.g. fireman, fisherman). Some were normally done by women, and their names had no form for men (e.g. nurses and secretaries were almost always women). Nowadays, fire-fighter is preferred to fireman, and nurse is preferred for both sexes instead of male nurse for a man. Personal assistant (or PA) is often used instead of secretary. The neutral words are more ‘politically correct’ (not likely to offend anyone):

    Two fire-fighters were injured in a blaze at an electronics factory yesterday.

    My brother’s a nurse in the local hospital.

    Animal names

    Some animal names have male and female forms. Very often, one of the names acts as a neutral term, even if we know the sex of the animal.

    Male Female Neutral
    bull cow cow
    dog bitch dog
    drake duck duck

    There were loads of people out walking with dogs today.

    In the middle of this park there was a lovely pond with ducks swimming on it.

    相关文章

      网友评论

          本文标题:Nouns and gender

          本文链接:https://www.haomeiwen.com/subject/vgfandtx.html