Gender Key Terms

Description

A Levels English Language (Language and Gender) Flashcards on Gender Key Terms, created by Hazel Meades on 07/03/2014.
Hazel Meades
Flashcards by Hazel Meades, updated more than 1 year ago
Hazel Meades
Created by Hazel Meades almost 11 years ago
79
1

Resource summary

Question Answer
Sex A biological terms which refers to whether you are male or female.
Gender Sociological differences. What you identify as.
Gender neutral denotation Words that don't contain morphemes with specific gender connotations. E.g: lawyer, doctor, nurse. NOT policeman.
Marked terms Includes a diminuitive suffix e.g: -ess, -ette usually used to distinguish the female form.
Semantic derogation Historically, these were differentiated by sex alone but over time have gained different connotations and in some cases denotations e.g: mistress/master.
Pejoration A semantic shift which results in a less favourable connotation over time.
Unmarked form The measured norm against which marked lexical items can be compared.
Marked form That which stands out as different from a norm.
Covert marking Marking that's understood. E.g: for the antonyms young and old (how old are you?) young is the marked term, old is unmarked.
Overt marking Marking that takes place through affixation/modification e.g: actress.
Collocation The way in which words and phrases occur over and over again in certain predictable contexts.
Gender neutral terms Many professions use politically correct terms that concern no specific gender. E.g: flight attendant instead of air hostess.
Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Linguistic Methods
sarahsing
English Language Techniques
lewis001
Romeo & Juliet Quotes
Lucy Hodgson
Gender Theorists
Hazel Meades
English Speech Analysis Terminology
Fionnghuala Malone
English Language
livbennett
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
K d
Macbeth Quotes To Learn
Sophie Brokenshire
How does Shakespeare present villainy in Macbeth?
maxine.canvin
English Literature Key Terms
charlotteoom
Using GoConqr to teach English literature
Sarah Egan