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Explanation of gender of Dutch words From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the Dutch language, the gender of a noun determines the articles, adjective forms and pronouns that are used in reference to that noun. Gender is a complicated topic in Dutch, because depending on the geographical area or each individual speaker, there are either three genders in a regular structure or two genders in a dichotomous structure (neuter/common with vestiges of a three-gender structure). Both are identified and maintained in formal language.
Traditionally, nouns in Dutch, like in more conservative Germanic languages, such as German and Icelandic, have retained the three grammatical genders found in the older forms of all Germanic languages: masculine, feminine, or neuter. Almost all Dutch speakers maintain the neuter gender, which has distinct adjective inflection, definite article and some pronouns. The picture is less clear for the masculine and feminine gender, because in the standard language the adjective inflection of both is identical, and both share the same article and the same demonstrative pronouns. There are clearer grammatical differences in the definite articles in the genitive (masculine des vs feminine der), demonstrative determiners (masculine diens vs feminine dier) and relative pronouns (masculine wiens vs feminine wier), but usage of those is mostly limited to formal or literary language. The standard language mostly distinguishes masculine and feminine genders of animate nouns by the use of the personal pronoun, which are hij/hem for masculine nouns and zij/haar for feminine nouns and by corresponding possessive pronouns, zijn/zijne for masculine nouns and haar/hare for feminine nouns; all of those have additional unstressed reduced forms. It is also distinguished in the case forms of the definite article and some pronouns, but those have fallen out of use and are only retained in literary or archaic usage and fixed expressions.
In Belgium and southern dialects of the Netherlands, the distinction between the three genders is usually, but not always, maintained, and can be told from articles, adjectives and demonstrative pronouns. As a consequence, many speakers in these regions are still aware of the traditional genders and will, in standard language, also (and equally correctly) refer to words that were traditionally feminine with zij, whereas traditionally masculine words retain the use of hij. In the case of persons and animals of known sex the pronouns used are generally determined by the biological sex rather than by the grammatical gender of the word.
In most remaining parts of the Netherlands and in Suriname, the distinction between masculine and feminine nouns has disappeared, producing a common gender that uses the same inflections and pronouns as the original masculine. The pronouns hij and zij are used when the referent has a natural gender, so hij is used for a male person, zij for a female person. However, when the noun is inanimate and has no natural gender, the pronoun hij is used not only for traditionally masculine nouns, but for traditionally feminine nouns as well. Thus, the situation in these areas resembles that of English, although there is still a distinction among inanimate nouns between common hij and neuter het (English uses it for both, having lost all gender distinctions in almost all inanimate nouns, with few exceptions such as watercraft, aircraft, buildings and countries).
In the written tradition, which forms the base for the (prescribed) standard language, there are some remains of the traditional three genders. The following table shows the use of various articles and pronouns in the standard form of Dutch, as well as how the use of gender in the two language areas aligns with this. In areas maintaining the three genders, there is no common gender. In areas with only two genders, only nouns referring to people have a distinction between masculine and feminine; all other nouns that are not neuter are common.
Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Indefinite article | een | - | ||
Definite article | de | het | de | |
Adjective for definite noun | groene |
groen(e) | groene | |
Adjective for indefinite noun | groen | |||
Subject pronoun | hij | zij | het | zij |
Object pronoun | hem | haar | hen, hun | |
Possessive | zijn | zijn | hun | |
Inflected possessive zijn as example |
zijn | |||
Proximal demonstrative | deze | dit | deze | |
Distal demonstrative | die | dat | die | |
Interrogative | wie | wat | wie | |
The standard as prescribed by the Dutch Language Union categorises most nouns into one of four categories:
Thus, the standard only mandates the feminine gender for a subset of all historically feminine nouns. These are nouns with an overtly recognizable feminine suffix. However, this distinction is maintained only in formal or written standard Dutch, whereas many speakers do not make such a distinction in informal speech; they use only the common gender. Such speakers must therefore remember which endings are feminine, because they cannot rely on their own language intuition. Although some speakers do follow the standard in this respect, others do not and simply use the genders the way they are accustomed to them in their own everyday speech (either masculine/feminine/neuter or common/neuter).
In more formal, poetic or archaic language, a stronger distinction exists between the masculine and feminine genders, especially in the genitive forms as shown in the table below (although the distinctions in the bottom row are still commonly applied in informal speech):
Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | |
---|---|---|---|
Indefinite article (genitive form) | enes | ener | enes |
Definite article (genitive form) | des | der | des |
Distal demonstrative pronoun (genitive form) | diens | dier | diens |
Relative pronoun (genitive form) | wiens | wier | wiens |
The trend so far is towards the increasing use of the common gender, at the expense of the masculine/feminine distinction. Although this process has long been completed in the spoken language of the north, the three-gender structure is still widespread in the south, though some suggest it is slowly losing ground due to the increase of language contact through mass media like television and the Internet. Some dictionaries have dropped the distinction between the two genders entirely, preferring to mark words with their definite article de (common) or het (neuter), whereas others like the Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal—the largest Dutch dictionary—retain it. Because the feminine gender of nouns tends to be respected in formal or written language, which tends to follow the standard more strictly, this sometimes also results in hypercorrection, caused by the perceived formality of the feminine gender, with feminine pronouns occasionally used for nouns that are historically masculine, and even for nouns that are neuter.
The following list reflects the use of gender that is prescribed for standard Dutch and used by the Language Union and educational material for teaching gender. It is not exhaustive, and covers only cases that follow some recognizable pattern. Many words have unpredictable gender and simply have to be memorized (and will be f/m in the standard, if not neuter).
Words referring to animate entities whose natural gender is masculine:
However, diminutives such as jongetje "little boy" are neuter nouns. Nouns for professions (which are often historically masculine) may also be treated as gender-neutral, and are then either masculine or feminine depending on the referent.
Words not referring to animate entities ending in the following suffixes, which mostly form agent nouns, are masculine:
There are a few exceptions, such as:
Abstract deverbal nouns are normally masculine:
New abstract nouns formed in this way are always masculine, but existing ones may be feminine, particularly if they are older words.
Words referring to beings whose natural gender is feminine:
This includes words ending in a suffix that derives a noun for a female person from either a masculine noun or from another word:
The Dutch language leaves in many cases some liberty to individual users on how to derive the female form of a noun; for example apothekeres, apothekerin and apotheekster would all be considered correct forms for "female apothecarian". A recent interesting development with respect to professions has been the return to the masculine gender (in this case apotheker) for practitioners of either sex, combined with pronouns based on the natural gender of the practitioner.
However, diminutives such as meisje "girl" are neuter (but see below).
Words for abstract concepts ending with the following suffixes are feminine:
There are a few exceptions, e.g. dienst "service", which is masculine, or vonnis "verdict", which is neuter. There are also many nouns ending in -schap that are neuter, such as gereedschap "tool", landschap "landscape". These usually refer to concrete objects rather than abstract concepts, but the distinction is not always clear. For example, ouderschap "parenthood" is neuter but abstract, whereas gemeenschap "community" is feminine but concrete.
Suffixes that are borrowed from Latin or Greek often retain their feminine gender from those languages. This includes:
There are, as always, a few exceptions. For example, kanarie "canary" is masculine and ministerie "ministry" is neuter.
Diminutives are always neuter. They end in -je in the standard language, but the suffix -ke is also used in many dialects.
When a diminutive refers to a person, masculine or feminine pronouns may refer to the person instead of the neuter het. However, the definite article, demonstrative pronouns, and adjective inflection remain neuter. An exception is meisje, whose neuter gender is generally unknown by most people and which uses feminine pronouns even in formal speech. Unlike in German, grammatical agreement of the type *kijk dat meisje, het kamt zijn haar ‘look at that girl, it is combing its hair’ has been abandoned for diminutives of people, so that words such as meisje are now universally treated as a feminine word, although the agreeing neuter article het is retained. The same applies to jongetje ‘little boy’, mannetje ‘little man, manling’, vrouwtje ‘little woman’, etc.
Nouns prefixed with ge- and related prefixes with no suffix are neuter, especially if they are collectives derived from a verb stem:
Collective nouns prefixed with ge- and suffixed with -te are neuter:
Nouns prefixed with ge- and suffixed with -te are feminine if they are abstract concepts, such as gedachte "thought".
Names of towns, countries and languages are always neuter, even if they are clearly derived from a masculine or feminine noun:
The exceptions are formed by countries or regions that contain a masculine or feminine article as part of their name: de Randstad (stad is feminine or masculine), de Soedan, de Congo, etc.
The following suffixes that are borrowed from Latin or Greek are neuter:
There is one notable exception, datum ‘date’, which is masculine and has both a regular nativized plural in datums (considered wrong by some speakers) and the original Latin neuter plural in data.
Southern Dutch consists roughly of all dialects south of the river Meuse. In these dialects, there was a tendency towards accusativism in early modern Dutch (16th and 17th centuries). This was the tendency to use the accusative case in the role of the nominative. When cases fell out of use later, the nominative was the one that survived, but in areas with accusativism these forms historically belonged to the accusative case. Unlike the old nominative, the accusative had a clear distinction between masculine and feminine forms. As it was these forms that survived in southern Dutch, the genders remained naturally distinct, and remain so up to the present day.
In addition, Southern Dutch developed a separate indefinite article for neuter words—"e" or "ee(n)"—which is pronounced as a schwa (IPA: ə).[3][4][5] Similar to English "an" versus "a", this article is not used when the following word starts with a vowel or a h-; rather "een" ('n) is used in those cases.
The following table shows the points where the southern dialects differ from the standard language. As the dialects themselves are not standardised, different forms may be found in different areas, although differences have lessened in the Tussentaal, the Dutch regiolect in the Region of Flanders.
Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Indefinite article | ne(n) | een | e, een | - |
Definite article | de(n) | de | het | de |
Inflected possessive zijn as example |
zijne(n) | zijn | zijn | zijn |
Proximal demonstrative | deze(n) | deze | dit | deze |
Distal demonstrative | diene(n) | die | dat | die |
Example 1: (vrouw is feminine)
Example 2: (auto and boom are masculine)
Example 3: (appartement and dorp are neuter)
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (August 2014) |
Unlike English (with the use of "they" as the singular gender-neutral pronoun) or Swedish (which developed the new gender-neutral pronoun "hen"), Dutch did not develop a gender-neutral pronoun. As a consequence, Dutch employs a variety of means to accommodate cases where the gender of a person is not known. Standard solutions include the use of degene ("the one"; unstressed) and diegene ("that one"; stressed). More formally, the word alwie ("any(one) who") may be employed.
As Dutch is closely related to German, Dutch nouns tend to have the same gender as their close cognates in German. That is, Dutch has masculine or feminine gender (de) where German has masculine (der) or feminine (die), and Dutch has neuter (het) where German has neuter (das). The exceptions are so few that they can be noted specially,[citation needed] which can be helpful for language learners.
de : das
de (f) : der
het : der
het : die
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