Like Indian languages, /aan/-/pen/ (Malayalam) and /ladka/-/ladki/ (Hindi), English also shows gender differences in nouns: /boy/-/girl/. However as an English speaker, one only needs to know the words that are different, in terms of sex. For example, an unmarried man is called a ‘bachelor’, while an unmarried woman is called a ‘spinster’. The above two words, although referring to two different humans, having the same contextual meaning, are specified according to their gender. For example,
08.06.2021. (08:51)
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hamdan
Like Indian languages, /aan/-/pen/ (Malayalam) and /ladka/-/ladki/ (Hindi), English also shows gender differences in nouns: /boy/-/girl/. However as an English speaker, one only needs to know the words that are different, in terms of sex. For example, an unmarried man is called a ‘bachelor’, while an unmarried woman is called a ‘spinster’. The above two words, although referring to two different humans, having the same contextual meaning, are specified according to their gender. For example,
08.06.2021. (08:51) - - - - - promjene spremljene- uredi komentar - obriši komentar - prijavi ovaj komentar kao spam - zabrani komentiranje autoru ovog komentara- učitavam...