In Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian, as well as in various other German, Swiss German and Dutch dialects, it is possible to assign the feminine and neuter genders to female individuals. The neuter gender of female first names is strongly grammaticalized in both Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian, so that they mostly trigger the neuter gender on their targets (e.g. definite articles, personal pronouns). At the same time, the use of the neuter gender is not limited to the use of female first names. Rather, personal pronouns can also be used in reference to female appellatives, female kinship terms, and combinations of a female first name with a last name. Moreover, gender assignment is determined by socio-pragmatic factors (e.g. age, fa...
Whereas Standard Dutch only distinguishes between two adnominal grammatical genders, substandard var...
In Swiss German dialects first names are commonly used with a preceding article. Historically, the f...
In this article we addres the question of whether, and to what exetent, noun gender attribution in l...
In Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian, as well as in various other German, Swiss German and Dutch ...
In some German dialects the neuter gender can be used in reference to a female person. This language...
In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish, female first names can take on both feminine and n...
In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish women or girls are referred to in the neuter. This ...
The specialty of hybrid nouns is their different agreement according to certain features of the agre...
In various Swiss German dialects, the feminine gender is not the sole possibility when referring to ...
This paper compares pronominal gender agreement in Dutch and German. Pronouns do not always agree wi...
Pronominal gender agreement typically involves agreement between the pronoun and the lexical gender ...
Gender assignment relates to a native speaker's knowledge of the structure of the gender system of h...
This paper examines whether gender features (masculine, feminine, neuter) in German have to be inter...
International audienceTwo experiments designed to explore the acquisition of grammatical gender in F...
This thesis deals with patterns of variation in the usage of gender-inclusive personal nouns in cont...
Whereas Standard Dutch only distinguishes between two adnominal grammatical genders, substandard var...
In Swiss German dialects first names are commonly used with a preceding article. Historically, the f...
In this article we addres the question of whether, and to what exetent, noun gender attribution in l...
In Luxembourgish and Moselle Franconian, as well as in various other German, Swiss German and Dutch ...
In some German dialects the neuter gender can be used in reference to a female person. This language...
In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish, female first names can take on both feminine and n...
In numerous German dialects and in Luxembourgish women or girls are referred to in the neuter. This ...
The specialty of hybrid nouns is their different agreement according to certain features of the agre...
In various Swiss German dialects, the feminine gender is not the sole possibility when referring to ...
This paper compares pronominal gender agreement in Dutch and German. Pronouns do not always agree wi...
Pronominal gender agreement typically involves agreement between the pronoun and the lexical gender ...
Gender assignment relates to a native speaker's knowledge of the structure of the gender system of h...
This paper examines whether gender features (masculine, feminine, neuter) in German have to be inter...
International audienceTwo experiments designed to explore the acquisition of grammatical gender in F...
This thesis deals with patterns of variation in the usage of gender-inclusive personal nouns in cont...
Whereas Standard Dutch only distinguishes between two adnominal grammatical genders, substandard var...
In Swiss German dialects first names are commonly used with a preceding article. Historically, the f...
In this article we addres the question of whether, and to what exetent, noun gender attribution in l...