Difference between revisions of "gender"

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(Created page with "<hide> page type::article page type::disambiguation thing type::attribute thing type::definition </hide> ==About== The idea of gender derives from {{l/sub|...")
 
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==Links==
 
==Links==
 
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==Footnotes==
 
==Footnotes==
 
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<ref name=dictionary-com>[http://www.dictionary.com/browse/gender?s=t Dictionary.com] has a good explanation under "Usage note", starting with: ''"Although it is possible to define gender as “sex,” indicating that the term can be used when differentiating male creatures from female ones biologically, the concept of gender, a word primarily applied to human beings, has additional connotations—more rich and more amorphous—having to do with general behavior, social interactions, and most importantly, one's fundamental sense of self."''</ref>
 
<ref name=dictionary-com>[http://www.dictionary.com/browse/gender?s=t Dictionary.com] has a good explanation under "Usage note", starting with: ''"Although it is possible to define gender as “sex,” indicating that the term can be used when differentiating male creatures from female ones biologically, the concept of gender, a word primarily applied to human beings, has additional connotations—more rich and more amorphous—having to do with general behavior, social interactions, and most importantly, one's fundamental sense of self."''</ref>
 
</references>
 
</references>

Revision as of 13:58, 23 August 2017

About

The idea of gender derives from reproductive role, sometimes referred to as "sex"[1]. In this primary sense, it can refer to:

For an overview of all the aspects of gender in this sense of the word, see Gender 101.

Other Uses

It also is used in the context of:

Links

Footnotes

  1. Dictionary.com has a good explanation under "Usage note", starting with: "Although it is possible to define gender as “sex,” indicating that the term can be used when differentiating male creatures from female ones biologically, the concept of gender, a word primarily applied to human beings, has additional connotations—more rich and more amorphous—having to do with general behavior, social interactions, and most importantly, one's fundamental sense of self."