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| === Gender === | === Gender === | ||
| - | Grammatical gender should, first of all, be differentiated from both social/ | + | Grammatical gender should, first of all, be differentiated from both social/ | 
| - | Grammatical gender is a way of describing classes of nouns within a language that code a variety of information such as [[animacy]] and participate in morphosyntactic phenomena such as [[verbal agreement | agreement]]. | + | Grammatical gender is a way of describing classes of nouns within a language that code a variety of information such as [[animacy]] and participate in morphosyntactic phenomena such as [[verbal agreement|agreement]]. | 
| Although grammatical gender has played a particularly significant role in prior investigations of Sumerian grammar, comprehensive statements on its place in the overall system have been few and far between. In Michalowski' | Although grammatical gender has played a particularly significant role in prior investigations of Sumerian grammar, comprehensive statements on its place in the overall system have been few and far between. In Michalowski' | ||
| - | : Sumerian has two genders, animate and inanimate. The animate class covers humans and divinities, everything else is inanimate; perhaps one should use the terms <i>personal</i> and <i>impersonal</i>. Gender is not marked directly on the noun, but only surfaces in cross-reference, | + | : Sumerian has two genders, animate and inanimate. The animate class covers humans and divinities, everything else is inanimate; perhaps one should use the terms //personal// and //impersonal//. Gender is not marked directly on the noun, but only surfaces in cross-reference, | 
| - | As Michalowski makes clear, there is no morphologically segmentable group of gender markers in Sumerian, but reflexes of the personal and impersonal genders show up in a number of places within the grammar: wh-words such as <b>a.ba</ | + | As Michalowski makes clear, there is no morphologically segmentable group of gender markers in Sumerian, but reflexes of the personal and impersonal genders show up in a number of places within the grammar: wh-words such as **a.ba** " | 
| - | Perhaps more importantly, | + | Perhaps more importantly, | 
| == The role of grammatical gender in Sumerian grammatical theory == | == The role of grammatical gender in Sumerian grammatical theory == | ||
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| == Bibliography == | == Bibliography == | ||
| - | *Aikhenvald, | + |  | 
| - | *Corbett, Greville G. 1991. Gender. Cambridge University Press. | + | *Corbett, Greville G. 1991. //Gender//. Cambridge University Press. | 
| - | *Ibrahim, Muhammad Hasan. 1973. Grammatical Gender: Its Origin and Development. The Hague: Mouton. | + | *Ibrahim, Muhammad Hasan. 1973. //Grammatical Gender: Its Origin and Development//. The Hague: Mouton. | 
| - | *Lakoff, George. 1987. Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind. University of Chicago. | + | *Lakoff, George. 1987. //Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind//. University of Chicago. | 
| - | *Michalowski, | + | *Michalowski, | 
| - | *Senft, Gunter, ed. 2000. Systems of Nominal Classification. Cambridge University Press. | + | *Senft, Gunter, ed. 2000. Systems of Nominal Classification. Cambridge University Press. | 
| - | *Silverstein, | + | *Silverstein, | 
 
    



