• @[email protected]
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    126 hours ago

    So as far as I can tell the rule for deciding if a french word is feminine is “does it end with an e”.

    There are exceptions and French people claim that’s not how it works, but it is an incredibly useful heuristic

    • @[email protected]
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      54 hours ago

      I feel that ‘gender’ is probably a misleading term for the languages that have ‘grammatical gender’, it rarely has anything to do with genitalia. ‘Noun class’, where adjectives have to decline to agree with the class would fit better in most cases.

      English essentially does not have decline adjectives, except for historical outliers like blond/e where no-one much cares if you don’t bother, and uses his / hers / its / erc using a very predictable rule. So no ‘grammatical gender’.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 minutes ago

        English has the peculiarity of having two variants of the same word: “gender” and “genre” with slightly different meanings.

        You could lean on it and go with genre. But just changing the word is unlikely to help much, the concept itself is deeply associated with genitalia in English culture, you’d still need to explain it.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 hour ago

        ‘Noun class’, where adjectives have to decline to agree with the class would fit better in most cases.

        great,now explain why the water in spanish fits into a noun class with incorrect “the” and why hands do the same thing, but for the opposite class.

        bonus : why are fire and door in different noun classes?

        the source of this arrogance : first language had no noun classes , nor indefinite articles.