In French, and other gender marked languages, there are two ways to interpret a grammatical masculine form when used to refer to social roles or occupations [e.g., les magiciens (the magiciansmasculine)]. It can refer to a group composed of only men (specific use of the masculine form), or one composed of both women and men (generic use). Studies of adults revealed that the rule that masculine forms can be interpreted as inclusive of either gender is not readily applied. To gain a better understanding of the processes shaping this phenomenon, we present a follow-up study (N = 52) to Lévy et al. (2016) to explore how French-speaking kindergarten children (3–5 years of age) resolve the semantic ambiguity of the grammatical masculine form when...
International audienceWe examined the spontaneous production of feminine counterparts of three categ...
Recent studies from countries with grammatical gender languages (e.g., French) found both children a...
Can the perception of a word be influenced by its grammatical gender? Can it happen that speakers of...
In French, and other gender marked languages, there are two ways to interpret a grammatical masculin...
International audienceThe French language has a grammatical gender system in which all nouns are ass...
The French language has a grammatical gender system in which all nouns are assigned either a masculi...
Despite the increased use of different types of gender-fair forms in French, studies investigating t...
The influence of stereotype and grammatical information (masculine intended as generic) on the repre...
In this paper we argue that the generic use of the masculine represents a grammatical rule that migh...
Can a Secretary of State Become Pregnant? The Influence of the Masculine Generic on Mental Represent...
In Study 1, the relationship between morphophonological cues and gender assignment in French was exa...
This study examines syntactic and morphological aspects of the production and comprehension of prono...
International audienceThis paper attempts to answer a threefold question: from what kind of cues gen...
A list of role names for future use in research on gender stereotyping was created and evaluated. In...
A list of role names for future use in research on gender stereotyping was created and evaluated. In...
International audienceWe examined the spontaneous production of feminine counterparts of three categ...
Recent studies from countries with grammatical gender languages (e.g., French) found both children a...
Can the perception of a word be influenced by its grammatical gender? Can it happen that speakers of...
In French, and other gender marked languages, there are two ways to interpret a grammatical masculin...
International audienceThe French language has a grammatical gender system in which all nouns are ass...
The French language has a grammatical gender system in which all nouns are assigned either a masculi...
Despite the increased use of different types of gender-fair forms in French, studies investigating t...
The influence of stereotype and grammatical information (masculine intended as generic) on the repre...
In this paper we argue that the generic use of the masculine represents a grammatical rule that migh...
Can a Secretary of State Become Pregnant? The Influence of the Masculine Generic on Mental Represent...
In Study 1, the relationship between morphophonological cues and gender assignment in French was exa...
This study examines syntactic and morphological aspects of the production and comprehension of prono...
International audienceThis paper attempts to answer a threefold question: from what kind of cues gen...
A list of role names for future use in research on gender stereotyping was created and evaluated. In...
A list of role names for future use in research on gender stereotyping was created and evaluated. In...
International audienceWe examined the spontaneous production of feminine counterparts of three categ...
Recent studies from countries with grammatical gender languages (e.g., French) found both children a...
Can the perception of a word be influenced by its grammatical gender? Can it happen that speakers of...