Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "gender"

Lexicographically close words:
gence; gend; gendarme; gendarmes; gende; gendered; genders; gendes; genealogical; genealogies
  1. All of these characteristics are in part adventitious, but to a large extent the gender is a phenomenon of growth, indicating the stage to which the language has attained.

  2. A lexic comparison is between vocal elements; a grammatic comparison is between grammatic methods, such, for example, as gender systems.

  3. The English verb has since then acquired wonderful power and compass by means of the auxiliary verbs; but its whole tendency is at variance with the elaborations in number and gender of the Iroquois verb.

  4. It does not, however, result that, because there is no gender required in the conjugations, the idea of sexuality is unknown to the nomenclature.

  5. It is only in the conjugations that the principle of gender becomes lost in that of vitality.

  6. It is the gender of the language; but a gender of so unbounded a scope, as to merge in it the common distinctions of a masculine and feminine, and to give a twofold character to the parts of speech.

  7. There is, in fact, no gender required by the conjugations, it being sufficient to denote the vitality or non-vitality of the class.

  8. But the gender must be changed, when it becomes necessary to speak of separate numbers.

  9. Whoever sees multiculturalism as an issue of race, or feminism as one of gender (against the background of history), will not be able to design a course of action to best serve those whose different condition is now acknowledged.

  10. Elgin, in which gender biases are reversed (Láadan).

  11. In the other cases they have the same case endings as gender stems.

  12. Gender is, properly speaking, the distinction of sex.

  13. Consonant stems are mostly substantive, and include both gender words and neuters.

  14. If the substantives denote both persons and things, either the gender of the substantives denoting persons is used, or the neuter.

  15. The endings, which are called case endings for brevity, indicate number as well as case, and serve also to distinguish gender words from neuters in the nominative and accusative singular of some stems, and of all plurals.

  16. I have rarely changed the gender or the number the plural being often employed for the singular (vol.

  17. The go and lo agree in gender and number with the subject, but la is immutable.

  18. Gujarati agrees with Marathi (an outer language) as against Hindostani in retaining the neuter gender of Sanskrit and Prakrit.

  19. Give the rules for gender in the third declension.

  20. Some words, then, have a gender quite apart from sex or real gender, and this is called «grammatical gender».

  21. Footnote 6: What is there peculiar about the gender of this word?

  22. What is the rule for gender in the fifth or «ē»-declension?

  23. Names of males are usually masculine and of females feminine, but names of things have grammatical gender and may be either masculine, feminine, or neuter.

  24. What is the rule for gender in the first declension?

  25. The gender can usually be determined by the ending of the word, and must always be learned, for without knowing the gender it is impossible to write correct Latin.

  26. Give the genitive and the gender of the nouns and the principal parts of the verbs.

  27. A relative pronoun must agree with its antecedent in gender and number; but its case is determined by the way it is used in its own clause.

  28. Compound words follow the gender of their last element.

  29. The gender is partly natural, partly grammatical, generally agreeing with the gender in Old English.

  30. The idea of gender was first suggested by the difference between man and woman, male and female, and, as in so many languages at the present day, was represented not by any outward sign but by the meaning of the words themselves.

  31. There are many indications that the parent Indo-European in an early stage of its existence had no signs of gender at all.

  32. Universal grammar is sometimes known as "the metaphysics of language," and it has to decide such questions as the nature of gender or of the verb, the true purport of the genitive relation, or the origin of grammar itself.

  33. Gender is the product partly of analogy, partly of phonetic decay.

  34. When once arrived at, the conception of gender was extended to other objects besides those to which it properly belonged.

  35. This third gender was fittingly expressed either by the objective case used as a nominative (e.

  36. The king's eldest first cousin of the masculine gender is to attend openly; and it is even conjectured, in a way to be quite authentic, that the king himself will be present in his own royal person.

  37. The Doctor was yet in the midst of his pointed attentions, when the king's eldest first cousin of the masculine gender entered, and the business of the meeting immediately began.

  38. The masculine pronoun is often used with an antecedent whose gender is not known.

  39. The gender and person usually take care of themselves, but the number of pronouns is a serious obstacle to correct speech.

  40. They think should be he thinks, he being the proper pronoun to employ when the gender is not indicated.

  41. Gender is only distinguished in the former class, while all casteless nouns are neuter.

  42. Pronouns agree with their antecedents, and with the nouns to which they belong, in gender and number: as, "This is the blow which killed Ned.

  43. Gender has to do only with the third person singular of the pronouns, he, she, it.

  44. The feminine gender is peculiar to animals of the female kind: as, a poetess, a lioness, a goose.

  45. He has so far read all of those words in the masculine gender only.

  46. Its gender is misstated and its import multiplied by two.

  47. The rules for distinguishing the gender of such nouns are as complicated as in German, and must be learned from the grammars.

  48. In rural dialects of Western Hindi and of Rajasthani sporadic instances of the neuter gender have survived, but elsewhere the only example occurs in the interrogative pronoun.

  49. In the Konkan the neuter gender is further employed to denote females below the age of puberty, as in cedu, a girl.

  50. Gender is the affection of a noun for distinction of sex.

  51. The origin of gender is most obscure, but its investment of both animate and inanimate things with sexual qualities shows it to be a product of the mythopoeic stage of man's progress, and demands some reference in these pages.

  52. All the individuals had names, functions, attributes, drawn from their relations and influences; and even sexes, from the gender of their appellations.

  53. According as the gender of the object was in the language of the nation masculine or feminine, the Divinity who bore its name was male or female.

  54. With that gender ratio, protection of females and young had to be the prime Traiti racial imperative.

  55. Males ran commerce and, obviously, the military; in other fields such as science or the arts, gender had no bearing.

  56. In fact, there was also a stern necessity in the case, for the lady on whom he had now set his young affections was particular as to her customers, and did not admit the shirt-collar gender to the honor of her confidence.


  57. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gender" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    animate; feminine; femininity; inanimate; masculine; neuter