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hankjønn

Hankjønn, or the masculine gender, is a grammatical category used for certain Norwegian nouns. In the traditional three-gender system, nouns are classified as hankjønn (masculine), hunkjønn (feminine), or intetkjønn (neuter). In Bokmål, many nouns are taught and described using a two-gender framework (common and neuter), so hankjønn may be less prominent in everyday speech. Nevertheless, the term remains standard in grammar descriptions and is a clear category in Nynorsk, where the three-gender system is more consistently maintained.

Nouns that belong to hankjønn typically take the indefinite article en (or ein in some dialects) and

Usage varies between Norwegian varieties. In modern Bokmål, the practical distinction between genders is often expressed

form
the
definite
by
adding
a
suffix,
for
example
en
gutt
becomes
gutten
(the
boy)
and
en
mann
becomes
mannen
(the
man).
Adjectives
preceding
hankjønn
nouns
usually
appear
in
the
masculine
form,
as
in
en
stor
gutt
(a
big
boy).
The
use
and
inflection
of
hankjønn
nouns
follow
rules
that
also
show
how
gender
interacts
with
number
and
definiteness
in
Norwegian.
through
a
two-gender
system,
with
many
nouns
treated
as
common
gender.
In
Nynorsk,
hankjønn
is
more
clearly
maintained
as
part
of
the
three-gender
framework.
Overall,
hankjønn
remains
a
fundamental
concept
for
describing
how
certain
Norwegian
nouns
appoint
masculine
grammatical
agreement.