Abstract

Psycholinguistic investigations of the way readers and speakers perceive gender have shown several biases associated with how gender is linguistically realized in language. Although such variations across languages offer interesting grounds for legitimate cross-linguistic comparisons, pertinent characteristics of grammatical systems – especially in terms of their gender asymmetries – have to be clearly identified. In this paper, we present a language index for researchers interested in the effect of grammatical gender on the mental representations of women and men. Our index is based on five main language groups (i.e., grammatical gender languages, languages with a combination of grammatical gender and natural gender, natural gender languages, genderless languages with few traces of grammatical gender and genderless languages) and three sets of specific features (morphology, masculine-male generics and asymmetries). Our index goes beyond existing ones in that it provides specific dimensions relevant to those interested in psychological and sociological impacts of language on the way we perceive women and men. We also offer a critical discussion of any endeavor to classify languages according to grammatical gender.

Highlights

  • The way we perceive women and men in society is partly grounded in the way we speak or write about these two groups

  • Grammatical gender systems vary between languages – and this paper presents an index of some important differences lacking from previous indexes – they share some characteristics that have been shown to greatly affect readers’

  • Psycholinguistic investigations of the way people perceive gender have shown different biases associated with the particulars of grammatical gender

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Summary

Introduction

The way we perceive women and men in society is partly grounded in the way we speak or write about these two groups. We will use the terms sex or gender identity for women and men referents.

Results
Conclusion
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