In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish women or girls are referred to in the neuter. This raises the question whether this is also the case for female animals. Based on data from the research project “Das Anna und ihr Hund – Weibliche Rufnamen im Neutrum”, the present article examines the gender of names and pronouns referring to dogs. Dogs today are no longer kept primarily to perform functions (guard dog, herding dog) but rather as pets and companions. This is also reflected in the fact that dogs are given names. In general, these clearly mark the sex of the dog. In the dialects we investigated pronouns, which refer to female dogs, are predominantly masculine, not feminine or neuter. Sex-specific appellatives are not used either...
This thesis investigates the correlation between the grammatical gender of generic nouns denoting an...
This paper examines whether gender features (masculine, feminine, neuter) in German have to be inter...
For more than 40 years, a debate on gender-related person references has been taking place in the Ge...
In various Swiss German dialects, the feminine gender is not the sole possibility when referring to ...
In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish, female first names can take on both feminine and n...
In Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian, as well as in various other German, Swiss German and Dutch ...
The Alemannic dialects in linguistic islands in Northern Italy have been undergoing strong changes s...
Data of the dialect research project “Das Anna und ihr Hund. Weibliche Rufnamen im Neutrum” indicate...
In some German dialects the neuter gender can be used in reference to a female person. This language...
In German, female and male first names are strictly segregated: there are two big inventories with t...
In Swiss German dialects first names are commonly used with a preceding article. Historically, the f...
International audienceAlthough the English gender system is a semantic system largely based on sex, ...
The specialty of hybrid nouns is their different agreement according to certain features of the agre...
The use of designations used for men and women has been discussed in German (as well as in other lan...
In this paper, I study various manifestations of the grammatical category gender in address-related ...
This thesis investigates the correlation between the grammatical gender of generic nouns denoting an...
This paper examines whether gender features (masculine, feminine, neuter) in German have to be inter...
For more than 40 years, a debate on gender-related person references has been taking place in the Ge...
In various Swiss German dialects, the feminine gender is not the sole possibility when referring to ...
In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish, female first names can take on both feminine and n...
In Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian, as well as in various other German, Swiss German and Dutch ...
The Alemannic dialects in linguistic islands in Northern Italy have been undergoing strong changes s...
Data of the dialect research project “Das Anna und ihr Hund. Weibliche Rufnamen im Neutrum” indicate...
In some German dialects the neuter gender can be used in reference to a female person. This language...
In German, female and male first names are strictly segregated: there are two big inventories with t...
In Swiss German dialects first names are commonly used with a preceding article. Historically, the f...
International audienceAlthough the English gender system is a semantic system largely based on sex, ...
The specialty of hybrid nouns is their different agreement according to certain features of the agre...
The use of designations used for men and women has been discussed in German (as well as in other lan...
In this paper, I study various manifestations of the grammatical category gender in address-related ...
This thesis investigates the correlation between the grammatical gender of generic nouns denoting an...
This paper examines whether gender features (masculine, feminine, neuter) in German have to be inter...
For more than 40 years, a debate on gender-related person references has been taking place in the Ge...