04795nam 2200589 450 991051168940332120210617170538.090-272-6886-X(CKB)3710000000379019(EBL)1996991(SSID)ssj0001492543(PQKBManifestationID)11894171(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001492543(PQKBWorkID)11505104(PQKB)11714403(MiAaPQ)EBC1996991(EXLCZ)99371000000037901920150417h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrGender across languagesVolume 4 /edited by Marlis Hellinger, Goethe University Frankfurt, Heiko Motschenbacher, Technical University of BraunschweigAmsterdam, [Netherlands] ;Philadelphia, [Pennsylvania] :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2015.©20151 online resource (431 p.)IMPACT: Studies in Language and Society ;Volume 36Description based upon print version of record.90-272-1877-3 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Gender Across Languages; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Languages of volume I, II and III; Preface; Acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; The linguistic representation of women and men: An overview; 1. Aims and scope of "Gender across languages"; 2. Gender classes as a special case of noun classes; 3. Categories of gender; 4. Gender-related structures; 5. Gender-related messages; 6. Language change and language reform; 7. Conclusion; Notes; References; Some new perspectives on gendered language structures; 1. Introduction2. Structural gender linguistics - A marginalised field?3. Developments in structural gender linguistics; 4. Central insights from the languages of this volume; 5. Conclusion; Notes; References; Structural gender trouble in Croatian; 1. Introduction; 2. Categories of gender; 3. Gender-related structures; 4. Usage of personal reference forms; 5. Language change and language reform; 6. Conclusion; Notes; References; Gender in a planned language: Esperanto; 1. Introduction; 2. Gender-related structures; 3. Language reform; 4. Gender in Esperanto proverbs; 5. Conclusion; Notes; ReferencesThe representation of gender in Estonian1. Introduction; 2. Categories of gender; 3. Gender-related structures; 4. Usage of personal reference forms; 5. Language change and language reform; 6. Conclusion; Notes; References; Probing the manifestations of gender in Ga; 1. Introduction; 2. Categories of gender in Ga; 3. Gendered structures; 4. Usage of personal nouns; 5. Conclusion; Notes; References; Gender in Swiss German; 1. Swiss German; 2. Categories of gender; 3. Gender-related structures; 4. Usage of personal reference forms; 5. Language planning and non-sexist language; 6. ConclusionNotesReferences; Gender trouble in a grammatically genderless language: Hungarian; 1. Introduction ; 2. Categories of gender; 2.1 Lexical and referential gender; 2.2 Social gender ; 2.3 Male-specific and generic ember 'man' ; 3. Gender-related structures; 3.1 Compounding ; 3.2 Pronominalization ; 4. Usage of personal reference forms; 4.1 Naming conventions and courtesy titles ; 4.2 Address terms ; 4.3 Idioms, proverbs and obscene expressions ; 5. Language change and language reform; 6. Conclusion; References; The linguistic representation and communication of gender in Igbo; 1. Introduction2. Categories of gender3. Gender-related structures; 4. Usage of personal reference forms; 5. Language change and reform; 6. Conclusion; Note; References; Gender in Kurdish: Structural and socio-cultural dimensions; 1. Introduction; 2. Categories of gender; 3. Gender-related structures; 4. Usage of personal reference forms; 5. Language change: Public discourse on gender in language; 6. Conclusion; Notes; References; Gender in Oneida; 1. Introduction; 2. Person, number and gender prefixes on verbs and nouns; 3. Categories of gender in Oneida; 4. The feminine-zoic; 5. Conclusion; NotesReferencesImpact, studies in language and society ;Volume 36.Grammar, Comparative and generalGenderElectronic books.UmU kursbokGrammar, Comparative and generalGender.415Motschenbacher HeikoHellinger MarlisMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910511689403321Gender across languages1237237UNINA