Revision as of 18:46, 20 February 2003 view sourceJaimenote (talk | contribs)124 edits This is the problem with a project that allows for intellegent contributions that exist "outside the box" where previous editions of our understanding are missing whole portions of reality. Perhaps t← Previous edit | Revision as of 18:51, 20 February 2003 view source MartinHarper (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers24,927 edits Moving content on "gender identity" to gender role, which gender identity redirects to.Next edit → | ||
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* Gender is commonly used as a synonym for '']'', refering to males and females classified according to genetic differences and distinct primary and secondary sex characteristics. This usage is considered incorrect by some. | * Gender is commonly used as a synonym for '']'', refering to males and females classified according to genetic differences and distinct primary and secondary sex characteristics. This usage is considered incorrect by some. | ||
* Gender identity is a distinctive construct in man. The terms "sex" and "gender" may in fact correlate, as would be the case when a person who has XY sex chromosomes and therefore is biologically male identifies himself as a man. However, this is not always the case thus demonstrating that "gender identity" as a distinct construct does operate independent and therefore would not be synonymous to a person's physical sex. Among the human specie, physical sex characteristics alone, whether primary or secondary, do not determine a person's "gender identity". | |||
* Social scientists use ''gender'' to refer to a particular social identity, social status, and cluster of roles, that are often (but not exclusively) assigned on the basis of sex. This is discussed on the article on ]s. | * Social scientists use ''gender'' to refer to a particular social identity, social status, and cluster of roles, that are often (but not exclusively) assigned on the basis of sex. This is discussed on the article on ]s. |
Revision as of 18:51, 20 February 2003
The word gender is derived from the Old French word genre, meaning "kind of thing". It has several meanings in modern usage:
- Gender as a linguistic term is a grammatical distinction and applies to words only, generally assigning them to the classes masculine, feminine or neuter. See grammatical gender.
- Gender is commonly used as a synonym for sex, refering to males and females classified according to genetic differences and distinct primary and secondary sex characteristics. This usage is considered incorrect by some.
- Social scientists use gender to refer to a particular social identity, social status, and cluster of roles, that are often (but not exclusively) assigned on the basis of sex. This is discussed on the article on gender roles.
- Situations sometimes arise where gender may be mimicked by inanimate objects, notably in cable connectors that have "male" and "female" counterparts. For an example in this context see gender changer.
- The gender (pronounced with a hard G, as in get) is an Indonesian musical instrument used in gamelan orchestras. See gender (music)
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that just points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page. Sometimes a link to both sex and will be appropriate.