Home

Maskulinem

Maskulinem is a term used in linguistics to denote the masculine grammatical gender in languages that have grammatical gender. In many grammar traditions, the masculine class is labeled maskulinum in Latin or Maskulinum in German, while English typically uses the term masculine or masculine gender. The concept applies to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and determiners that participate in gender agreement.

In languages with grammatical gender, nouns are categorized into one or more gender classes; the masculine

Adjectives and determiners typically agree in gender with their associated noun, so the form of modifiers changes

Etymology traces the term to Latin masculinus, from mas- “man” and -inus. The English word masculine derives

See also: grammatical gender; masculine; feminine; neuter; noun class.

class
is
one
of
them.
The
gender
often
reflects
semantics
(male
beings)
but
can
also
be
lexical
or
historical,
and
it
does
not
always
align
with
biological
sex.
For
example,
in
German
the
noun
der
Mann
is
masculine,
while
das
Mädchen
is
neuter
due
to
its
diminutive
form,
illustrating
that
gender
assignment
is
not
always
predictable
from
meaning.
when
used
with
masculine
nouns.
Gender
systems
vary
across
languages:
some
languages
have
only
two
genders
(masculine
and
feminine),
others
include
neuter,
and
some
assign
gender
to
inanimate
nouns
in
ways
that
do
not
correlate
with
natural
gender.
from
this
root;
maskulinum
or
Maskulinum
are
standard
labels
in
Latin-
and
German-language
grammars.
In
English,
however,
maskulinem
as
a
standalone
term
is
uncommon;
the
standard
references
usually
use
“masculine
gender”
or
the
specific
labels
maskulinum/maskulinum
in
their
respective
languages.