List of languages by type of grammatical genders

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This article lists languages depending on their approach to grammatical gender.

No grammatical gender

Certain language families, such as the Austronesian, Turkic and Uralic language families have no grammatical genders (see genderless language).

Masculine and feminine

Common and neuter

In these languages, animate nouns are predominantly of common gender, while inanimate nouns may be of either gender.

Animate and inanimate

In many such languages, what is commonly termed "animacy" may in fact be more accurately described as a distinction between human and non-human, rational and irrational, "socially active" and "socially passive" etc.

Other Two-Gender System

Masculine, feminine, and neuter

Note. In Slavic languages marked with an asterisk (*), traditionally only masculine, feminine and neuter genders are recognized, with animacy as a separate category for the masculine and feminine (in East Slavic languages) or masculine only (elsewhere); the actual situation is similar to Czech.

More than three grammatical genders

References

  1. http://idolinguo.org.uk/bgrammar.htm
  2. http://mw.lojban.org/papri/Questions/en
  3. http://web.archive.org/web/20070904225112/http://www.latrobe.edu.au/rclt/StaffPages/aikhenvald+downloads/ClassifiersELL2published.pdf
  4. Routledge Dictionary of Language and Linguistics, 1996. p.437
  5. Elbert, Samuel H.; Pukui, Mary Kawena (1979). Hawaiian Grammar. University of Hawaii Press - HONOLULU. pp. 136–144.
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