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- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!swrinde!network.ucsd.edu!sdcc12!sdcc13!pashley
- From: pashley@sdcc13.ucsd.edu (Montykins)
- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban
- Subject: Re: Etymological matters (was Re: African-American-top)
- Message-ID: <43003@sdcc12.ucsd.edu>
- Date: 3 Jan 93 21:23:32 GMT
- References: <1993Jan2.130701.3358@pollux.lu.se> <1993Jan3.032804.13413@samba.oit.unc.edu> <1993Jan3.040808.3903@Princeton.EDU>
- Sender: news@sdcc12.ucsd.edu
- Organization: University of California, San Diego
- Lines: 28
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-
- In article <1993Jan3.040808.3903@Princeton.EDU>, datepper@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (David Aaron Tepper) writes:
- >
- >Mmmmm... if I remember correctly, young children _in_general_ are
- >referred to in the neuter. The word for a young boy is "das Knabe",
- >I believe. In fact, that's where we get the words "ego" and "id".
- >
-
- Naw, we get 'em from Latin. Furrfu!
-
- >
- >Point is, though, that you really shouldn't condemn anything as
- >sexist until you know for sure that it doesn't apply equally to
- >male and female. "Das Knabe" and "Das Fraeulein" is one example--
-
- Now, Latin, _there's_ a sexist language! Explanations as to why
- "poet" and "farmer" look feminine but are really masculine are
- welcomed.
-
- -Paul "Monty" Ashley
-
- obUL: Really, "masculine" and "feminine" are convenient labels that
- have nothing to do with sex.
-
- obLinguistJoke: Words have gender; people have sex.
-
- --
- I'll be in San Francisco in early January. What shouldn't I miss?
- E-mail suggestions to the address cleverly hidden in the header.
-