tree_and_leaf: David Tennant in Edwardian suit, Oxford MA gown and mortar board. (academic doctor)
tree_and_leaf ([personal profile] tree_and_leaf) wrote2008-02-25 10:35 am
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Language Log: gender variation in French Native Speakers

French can't do genders either, shock!

Though what really shocks me is that there seems to have been so little work done on the topic; it's a pity that there's no indication as to where the native speakers came from. Certainly in German it's well known that some dialects have divergent genders of common words (Swabians have a habit of referring to 'der Butter' instead of 'die Butter', for instance, and there are similar anomalies around Aachen). The only factor the article mentions is age - it's possible that a growing uncertainty about gender might be evidence of a process which, left to itself, lead to it dying out, but I doubt that that will happen in a language with a fixed written system, particularly one watched over by the Académie.

[identity profile] anna-in-the-sky.livejournal.com 2008-02-25 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
This is incredibly interesting, thanks for linking! Also, take that you arrogant French waiters who would mock me for ordering "une coca" when apparantly, it's masculin. *g*

There is certainly one borrowed word in German which I always struggle with when it comes to gender: Why the hell is it 'das Email'? Well, I do know why, but I have to physically force myself to say or write 'das' instead of 'die' every time I use it.

BTW, they often say 'der Butter' in Baden, too. They pronounce it'de Budder', really. Funny, isn't it?

[identity profile] anna-in-the-sky.livejournal.com 2008-02-25 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I seem to have convinced myself that it is 'die Email' (actually, I'm sure Wahrig lists both as possible - drat, it's not in the shorter Wahrig and my big one's at home in Scotland)

LEO says so, too! I just checked. Now I'm even more confused.