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Grammatical gender: Revision history


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  • curprev 19:4619:46, 30 March 2024 Stusslig talk contribs 100,959 bytes −640 Bokmål is not a dialect, it's a written standard. Almost all Norwegian dialects use the three gendered system to some extent. I'd recommend making a separate paragraph for written Norwegian. undo Tag: Undo
  • curprev 17:2617:26, 30 March 2024 109.247.106.148 talk 101,599 bytes +640 Common–neuter contrast: Updated the part about Norwegian in this part. Among other things it stated that Norwegian Bokmål still uses feminine gender, which is true, but the way it was written made it seem like it was an important rule, when feminine gender has been optional since 1981(!). The entire section was also uncited, and the updated section has been cited with sources from Store Norske Leksikon, a Norwegian encyclopaedia. undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit

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  • curprev 01:5701:57, 25 July 2023 LandgraabIV talk contribs 101,157 bytes −127 Grammatical gender need not match natural gender: The derogatory Spanish words to refer to masculine women (often lesbians) are grammatically masculine precisely because of the perceived connection to natural (social) gender, as if they were men, or "man wannabes", so it does not make sense to include them with the other words in the list, which are masculine, feminine and neuter DESPITE the natural (social) gender of the referent, which is what this section is trying to emphasize. undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit

19 July 2023

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