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gender
1[ jen-der ]
noun
- either the male or female division of a species, especially as differentiated by social and cultural roles and behavior: Compare sex 1( def 1 ).
the feminine gender.
- a similar category of human beings that is outside the male/female binary classification. third gender ( def 1 ), genderqueer ( def 3 ), nonbinary ( def 3 ).
- the concept or system of categories such as male and female: More and more people have a nonbinary understanding of gender.
Gender is a factor in pay rates across industries.
More and more people have a nonbinary understanding of gender.
- Grammar.
- (in many languages) a set of classes that together include all nouns, membership in a particular class being shown by the form of the noun itself or by the form or choice of words that modify, replace, or otherwise refer to the noun, as, in English, the choice of he to replace the man, of she to replace the woman, of it to replace the table, of it or she to replace the ship. The number of genders in different languages varies from 2 to more than 20; often the classification correlates in part with sex or animateness. The most familiar sets of genders are of three classes (as masculine, feminine, and neuter in Latin and German) or of two (as common and neuter in Dutch, or masculine and feminine in French and Spanish).
- one class of such a set.
- such classes or sets collectively or in general.
- membership of a word or grammatical form, or an inflectional form showing membership, in such a class.
- Archaic. kind, sort, or class.
verb (used with object)
- to attribute gender to, or to classify by gender: Usually when I wear my hair down people gender me as female.
Gendering soaps seems a bit much—can't men and women use the same products?
Usually when I wear my hair down people gender me as female.
gender
2[ jen-der ]
verb (used with or without object)
- Archaic. to engender.
- Obsolete. to breed.
gender
/ ˈɛԻə /
noun
- a set of two or more grammatical categories into which the nouns of certain languages are divided, sometimes but not necessarily corresponding to the sex of the referent when animate See also natural gender
- any of the categories, such as masculine, feminine, neuter, or common, within such a set
- informal.the state of being male, female, or neuter
- informal.all the members of one sex
the female gender
gender
- A grammatical category indicating the sex, or lack of sex, of nouns and pronouns . The three genders are masculine, feminine, and neuter. He is a masculine pronoun; she is a feminine pronoun; it is a neuter pronoun. Nouns are classified by gender according to the gender of the pronoun that can substitute for them. In English, gender is directly indicated only by pronouns.
Sensitive Note
Derived Forms
- ˈԻ, adjective
Other Word Forms
- ·· adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of gender1
Origin of gender2
Word History and Origins
Origin of gender1
Example Sentences
Mina shares her dream of raising children outside of the fixed binaries of gender.
Alan, transitioning male to female, wants something “ambiguous” to express elements of both genders.
Although the bathrooms are divided by gender — and marked with Basquiat-style dinosaur imagery — on the nights when Simon Says takes over the Spotlight, those designations are ignored, and the toilets become unisex.
Jacob’s book explores gender as a framework in the larger context of Holocaust memory, and Runsteldler’s text highlights a Black man’s struggles against Jim Crow racism of the early 1900s.
The MP for Canterbury Rosie Duffield, who left the Labour Party because she said she felt "hounded" over her views on gender, has said she wants an apology from the prime minister.
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