In:Gender, Language and the Periphery: Grammatical and social gender from the margins
Edited by Julie Abbou and Fabienne H. Baider
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 264] 2016
► pp. 47–64
Gender marking and the feminine imaginary in Arabic
Published online: 16 December 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.264.03gue
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.264.03gue
In classical and dialectal Arabic syntax, linguists identify two opposite genders:
masculine and feminine. The latter is linguistically marked by the morpheme
a(t) (called fatha) while the former is considered unmarked and there is no
neuter. The morphosyntactical rule of feminine marking seems to be obvious: it
consists of adding a feminine inflection.
Yet, this morphosyntactic marking does not apply systematically. Some
adjectives do not have any feminine inflections despite describing
physiological and psychological female phenomena for instance, hamel ‘pregnant’,
taliq ‘repudiated’, thaib ‘widow’, mourdhi ‘breast feeder’, tamich ‘postmenopausal
woman’. This chapter addresses the following two questions: Why
does the gender marker disappear in such typical cases relating specifically to
female biological states? If we suppose these lexical units are masculinized, what
does this say about the social imaginary regarding gender and especially, the feminine?
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Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Hadjidemetriou, Chryso
2016. When She and He become It. In Gender, Language and the Periphery [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 264], ► pp. 227 ff.
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