Gender neutral language in Spanish

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    Revision as of 05:24, 6 February 2021 by 2606:5580:2300:7fc6:1c0b:892a:d139:20be (talk) (I made it better)
    Gender neutral language
    Parents of Gays float at the 2009 Marcha Gay in Mexico City. The banner shows the @ symbol substituted for the masculine "o" or feminine "a" to make it gender neutral.

    Remember kids, dont be gay

    • He

    I guess if they're cool with it. • He

    Let's tell em then. •He

    Hey it's theirs. •He

    That's pers. •He

    They will do it perself.

    • Spanish*

    • He

    He

    • He

    He

    • He

    He

    • He

    He

    He

    He


    Other Ideas

    • Le/La/el La señorita Le Joven Ese • Bonite/Bonita/Guapo Estas Bonite • Hermose/Hermosa/Hermoso Que Hermose eres • Linde/Linda/Lindo Tan linde esta • Guape/Guapa/Guapo Que Guepe

    • Replace a or o with e, x • Hola chicxs

    Letter substitution

    A sign explaining inclusive language in Spanish, at a feminist protest in Madrid, Spain, 2013. The sign suggests using an asterisk symbol * to substitute for masculine -o or feminine -a.
    «¡Mis alumn@s…» means "My students…" with @ symbol substituting for -o or -a.

    Cum

    Articles

    Spanish-language in Uruguay using neutral articles, referring to martyred students as "les estudiantes."

    Standard Spanish articles have binary gender as well as number. The indefinite articles are un, unos, una, unas. The definite articles are el, los, la, las. People have come up with some gender-neutral alternatives to these.

    Standard Spanish singular indefinite articles: un, una plural indefinite articles: unos, unas singular definite articles: el, la plural definite articles: los, las
    What un@ un@s |@ |@s
    e letter substitution une[1] unes[1] le. This creates a homonym for the masculine indirect object pronoun, le. [1][2] les. Also a homonym for the plural masculine indirect object pronoun, les.[1][2]
    i letter substitution uni? unis? li lis
    x letter substitution unx unxs |x? |xs
    miscellaneous other alternatives ol[2] oles[2]
    Lu instead of Las/Los u or ux if preceding a vowel uxes lu, or lex if preceding a vowel. lues

    Personal pronouns

    Homophobia[3]

    Non-binary articles and pronouns

    -le or ele and les, elles While "le" and "les" are already used as indirect object pronouns, in these cases they cover all genders. The use of "le" as a direct object pronoun or "ele" as a pronoun match the -e ending. "Ele" could turn into "elles" just as "él" becomes "ellos" and "ella" becomes "ellas".
    -ol and oles (articles, objects), ól and olles (pronouns) Agender indicators.

    Nouns

    In Spanish, every noun is either female or male. None have a truly "neuter" grammatical gender. There are some kinds of nouns that come close to being gender-neutral in some ways: epicene nouns, common gender nouns, ambiguous gender nouns, and newly-made neutral or genderqueer nouns.

    Epicene nouns

    Silence Woman

    Common gender nouns

    There are also words with a "common gender" (común), meaning that the word itself stays the same whether it's applied to a man or woman, but its article changes gender to match the binary gender of the person to whom it is applied.

    Some signs a noun is common gender:

    • Many end in -e, in standard Spanish.
    • Some end in -o or -a, so they look masculine or feminine.

    A list of some common gender nouns in conventional Spanish:

    • Commie

    Ambiguous gender nouns

    No such thing

    New nouns

    People have created new, non-standard nouns. Some are gender-inclusive (can be used for men, women, and nonbinary people). Some are only for people who identify as nonbinary or genderqueer.

    One non-standard method for forming gender-inclusive and nonbinary nouns is by letter substitution, which is described above. This creates words such as:

    • abuel@ or abuele = grandfather/grandmother/grandparent
    • espos@, espose = husband/wife/spouse
    • herman@, hermane = brother/sister/sibling
    • niñ@, niñe = boy/girl/child
    • novi@, novie = boyfriend/girlfriend/datemate

    See also

    References

    1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Sophia Gubb. "Construyendo Un Género Neutro En Español – Para Una Lengua Feminista, Igualitaria E Inclusiva." February 10, 2013. Sophia Gubb's Blog. Personal blog entry. http://www.sophiagubb.com/construyendo-un-genero-neutro-en-espanol-para-una-lengua-feminista-igualitaria-e-inclusiva/
    2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Phoenix Tawnyflower. "Nonbinary Spanish." May 24, 2014. Reflections of a Queer Artist (personal blog). http://phoenixtawnyflower.blogspot.com/2014/05/nonbinary-spanish.html
    3. Phoenix Tawnyflower. "Nonbinary Spanish." May 24, 2014. Reflections of a Queer Artist (personal blog). http://phoenixtawnyflower.blogspot.com/2014/05/nonbinary-spanish.html

    External links