Why do some languages use gendered nouns? It seems to just add more complexity for no benefit.

  • @Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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    1451 year ago

    Because languages aren’t constructed, they ‘evolved’ naturally from humans communicating with one another for many generations. As such, they aren’t intended to be as simple as possible. They aren’t intended in the first place. They’ve grown over time with no regard for whether the rules makes sense because nobody designed those rules, they just happened.

  • Jajcus
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    281 year ago

    It probably seems extra complexity for you, if your language does not use it. For native speakers it is just natural and not using it would be at least weird.

    We could ask the same question about articles . Those ‘the’ and ‘a’, why use them? It only makes English language harder to use! ‘Apple is apple’ why add another meaningless word?

    Of course after learning and using English for years I see the meaning of ‘a’ and ‘the’ and thy feel quite natural for me to (though sometimes they still make little sense to me – all the fights whether ‘The’ can be used with some proper name or not). The point is: a lot of features of a foreign language will fill alien and unnecessary.

    Maybe more on topic, that is how/why gendered words work in Polish: noun gender is usually linked to how it ends (but do not confuse that with suffixes of grammatical cases). Virtually all Polish women names end with ‘a’, so any other noun ending in ‘a’ sounds feminine and would be used in similar way. And sometimes it just ‘rhymes’ – like in ‘to jabkło’ (‘this apple’ – neuter), ‘ta gruszka’ (‘this pear’ – feminine), ‘ten banan’ (‘this banana’ – masculine). Of course thing get much more complicated than that (like in every language, just in different parts of the language).

    People were just talking in the way that it was convenient for them. And thousands years later scholars called this feature of particular set of languages ‘gender’ because words used seem to be related to genders.

    • @joel_feila@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      Side note. The evolves out of this and that. Over time the romance languages just cut the old Latin words up. Most of the time you can sub this or that for the. The other times we use is kund of as a topic marker.

    • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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      61 year ago

      Man if fucking only gender endings rhymed with the direct article being used to refer to them, that would have made learning french so much easier if all masculine nouns ended in e as in le and all feminine nouns ended in a as in la

  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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    251 year ago

    It’s a thing that can happen as more complex case ending systems like Latin lose audible distinctions over time.

    You might think that’d just result in linguistic gender being skipped in favor of no case endings altogether like English, but that’s not why English is theorized to have nixed gender.

    Linguists have started to theorize that the Danelaw is what killed english grammatical gender, as old English and Old Norse were similar-ish languages at the time with a decent level of mutual intelligibility, but the big sticking point would have been disagreements on grammatical gender between the two languages. So the theory goes that inhabitants of the Danelaw just kinda stopped using it to facilitate less confusing mutual conversation when interacting with a speaker of the other language, and eventually that innovation spread south with the unification of the seven kingdoms into England.

    What this tells us is that given a language with grammatical gender, it takes a very narrow set of circumstances to facilitate the conditions where a group might naturally innovate genderless communication.

    What’s actually kinda interesting is that Esperanto is having a moment like this, while technically you are to use the pronouns Li and Sxi, for he and her, Duolingo has a lot of the use of Si, which is a singular they, and since a lot of esperanto’s modern speakers are duolingo users, a lot of folks are just using si.

  • @6mementomori@lemmy.world
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    161 year ago

    oftentimes grammatical gender actually makes the language easier, paradoxically, and I’m sure there’s a really good explanation out there

    • @quilan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I don’t have the source with me, but I recall a paper about listening to various languages under different signal/ noise thresholds. If I recall correctly, languages like German that have multiple declensions were about to better able to parse noisy samples because of the redundant information. Sorry for not having the source off hand though.

    • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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      41 year ago

      Supposedly it helps understanding what would otherwise be considered vague statements in an ungendered language, and with being able to understand what’s being said even in a loud environment.

      Personally I think 90% of the drama around it comes from the bad decision of calling it gender instead of something else, because now english media has put the concept on blast for the silliness of assuming the moon has a penis and the sun has a vagina, when the purpose it’s supposed to serve doesn’t actually have anything to do with clarifying that specifically as much as clarifying which of two or more similar sounding words that sound like “sun” or “moon” you’re trying to actually refer to.

      Maybe clarifier classes? Call it CC (X) where X is the indicator that tells you which class it’s in in that specific language. So CC(O) for masculines in Spanish, or CC(T) for feminines in Arabic

    • @SquiffSquiff@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Are you able to provide an example as to how greater complexity makes it easier

      Edit: Thanks for the explanations. I get that multiple languages use gendered nouns to mean something that is clearly not ‘gender’ in the biological sense but key to understanding context. Seems strange as an English speaker where noun gender is vestigial if it even exists at all and even then it doesn’t matter if someone gets it wrong

      • Hyperreality
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        1 year ago

        For example, you hear a word that sounds (exactly/a bit) like another word, and can tell it’s not that other word, because the other word has a different gender. Or you only really need to learn one word because both are very similar. Some examples:

        Spanish : La Nina/La Nino. Both basically the same world (female/male child) and sound the same, unlike boy/girl in English.

        Dutch : Het jacht = the boat / yacht, de jacht = the hunt. No need to guess the meaning of the word from the context, you can go by gender.

        Spanish: El Capital = Capital as in money, La Capital = Capital as in Capital City.

        French: Un Livre = a book. La livre = pound sterling.

      • @Moghul@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This is an off the cuff example. Yes you can rephrase to get around this. It’s just an example.

        The chair and the table don’t go together because it’s made of wood.

        The chair and the table don’t go together because it’s made(female version) of wood.

        Since you ‘know’ tables get female articles and such, you know the speaker is talking about the table and not the chair. This is how Romanian works.

        Yes, I am aware that singular chairs are male and plural chairs are female in Romanian which wouldn’t clarify anything if the sentence was “The chairs and the tables don’t go together because they’re made(female version) of wood.”

      • @6mementomori@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        try making a really simple language, and figure out that it gets really difficult to speak because you start confusing shit. excessive complexity isn’t good either but some complexity is needed, and gender gives some of that. I have nothing to back this up though

  • guyrocket
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    101 year ago

    The simple answer I’m seeing on a quick review is that it is a way to simplify the complexity of the many possible nouns that could be uttered.

    “LA pap”
    “LE pep”

    These are imaginary words but the articles will help distinguish them from each other for a native speaker. They sound similar but I know it was “pap” and not “pep” because I also heard “la”.

    Also, gender is just ONE of the many possible dimensions used by noun classes in language. There are also things like size and animate/inanimate that are used by languages.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noun_class

    • @WereCat@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago
      • Ten (he) mesiac (moon)
      • To (it) slnko (sun)

      We got neutral genders in Slovak as well.

      For example

      • Tá žena (that (she) woman)
      • To dievča (that (it) girl)
      • Ten chlap (that (he) man)

      It all depends on how the word sounds and changes when you say it in different ways (skloňovanie / bending the word).

      And we also got 4 patterns for each gender based on which how the word changes so you get over 20 combinations on how to say word in each gender.

    • Flag
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      21 year ago

      Not in lotr world. There its the opposite, with the male moon chasing the ‘flaming hot’ female sun across the skies.

      Flaming hot is my addition but its kinda remarkably fitting : )

  • @joel_feila@lemmy.world
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    31 year ago

    Ok it strange thing that we call them gender. It goes back ancient greek.

    Really what Spanish does is put all nouns into 2 groups, the A group and the O group. Then you have rules like el goes on o nouns and la goes on a nouns.

    these evolve out of more complex classifier sysyems with many more categories. There is a podcast called lexicon vally that goes over this more details.

  • Patapon Enjoyer
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    1 year ago

    There is benefit to complexity. When you say “Mike and Susan went back home because he forgot his suitcase”, you don’t have to repeat Mike three times because the gendered pronouns carry that information, but you also know who the suitcase belongs to and who forgot it.

    • Skua
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      1 year ago

      Pretty sure that OP is referring to noun class systems. English doesn’t use one, but most other European languages do and English used to. Like German’s three equivalents to English’s “the”: der, die, and das, which German changes depending on the noun class (“grammatical gender”) of the noun in question regardless of its actual gender or whether it even has one

      • @Wasgaytsiedasan@feddit.de
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        31 year ago

        Zehzins example is also true for objects. “After the cat jumped on the table with the glass and the bowl it pushed it down.” Did the cat push down the glass or the bowl? In german for example it’s “Nachdem die Katze auf den Tisch mit dem Glas und der Schüssel gesprungen ist, hat sie sie heruntergestoßen.” (In this case the bowl) or “Nachdem die Katze auf den Tisch mit dem Glas und der Schüssel gesprungen ist, hat sie es heruntergestoßen.” (In this case the glass).

        • Skua
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          1 year ago

          Your cat example works because it shows an example that is ambiguous in English but not in German. Zezhin’s example was showing something that wasn’t ambiguous in English, a language with no noun class distinctions outside of referring to things by their actual gender, so there’s no benefit to having more general noun classes in that example

          • @Wasgaytsiedasan@feddit.de
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            41 year ago

            He was showing how gendered words can resolve ambiguity in an example were this also applies in english, so that you can extrapolate to situations like the one I (or the other replies) showed.

      • Patapon Enjoyer
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        1 year ago

        Same thing applies. For instance, you could say “I like drinking tea, but I’d rather drink beer, but “she” 's bad for you”.

        Granted, in this case it’s not at all necessary because you don’t even need a pronoun here to get the information but I’m not great at examples lol

      • MxM111
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        21 year ago

        The post above you talks about the same. In English, if you say “I see a door and a window. It is open”, it is not quite clear what “it” is. But if door is male gender and window is neutral gender, then it becomes clear that “it” refers to window in that sentence.

  • Quick Question (to OP and beyond) - the English language has wording for the gender of a person who acts - actor/actress.

    Yet, these days, most people in the movie or theatre industry call themselves “actors”. They’ve dropped the word “actress”.

    Do we know why?

    • livus
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      1 year ago
      • part of a wider trend eg “waitstaff” or “server” instead of “waiter”/“waitress”

      • due to traditional heirarchies, most job descriptions ending in -ess (or worse, starlet instead of star) are a devalued or less respected title

      • easier to just have one plural

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
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    11 year ago

    Complexity is a benefit when it comes to language, as it allows greater or more robust transfer of information. There’s a good comment downthread about how gender makes a language more robust: you know which object a pronoun refers to.

    I’ll point out that English is not free of gendered nouns, either: Ships, cities, and most nations are feminine, for example.

    • livus
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      51 year ago

      Ships, cities, and most nations are feminine, for example.

      Ships maybe but the other two are only feminine to old people. Even the stodgiest newspaper isn’t saying things like “The US sends her ambassador”.

    • Cris
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      1 year ago

      Super interesting perspective. As a person with a complicated relationship with gender it’s always seemed purely like a nuisance to me: that it would just further complicate the conversations about gender that are already so semantically tedious and fatiguing in English.

      I appreciate you broadening my perspective to include more than one way of looking at the subject

      • amio
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        31 year ago

        It’s just a strange name for a more or less arbitrary way to group words together. It has close to nothing to do with gender as identity.

    • @raef@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      Those are just esoteric or poetic uses. It’s perfectly fine to just say “it” in all those cases, but there is still a distinction for people. It’s worth considering the possibilities of that disappearing as well. In any case, we don’t conjugate differently for genders

  • @Vilian@lemmy.ca
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    11 year ago

    if i’m not mistaken, the explanation fpr portuguese is that latin didn’t had gendered nouns, you had it, she, he, basically, but in the evolution it and he got merged, so we have she and he, i can be totally wrong tho