1.Introduction
2. Structural properties
2.1 Grammatical gender
2.2 Gender agreement
2.3 The morphological structure of personal nouns
2.3.1 Derivation
2.3.2 Compounding
3. The lexical representation of women and men
4. Gender and reference
4.1 Gender-specific reference and agreement conflicts
4.2 Gender-indefinite reference and generic masculines
4.3 The endearing use of the masculine gender
4.4 Summary
5. The interpretation of generic masculines: Empirical evidence
5.1 Personal nouns with specific reference
5.2 Personal nouns with more generic reference
5.3 Metalinguistic test
6. Linguistic gender studies in Russia
6.1 Proverbs and idioms
6.1.1 The androcentric perspective
6.1.2 Ženskij golos – ‘The female voice’
6.1.3 ‘Woman/wife’
6.1.4 ‘Mother’
6.1.5 The “pseudo-female” perspective
6.2 Obscene expressions – a male domain?
7.Language politics
8.Suggestions for future research
Notes
References
2023. Uncovering Gender, Language, and Intersected Asymmetries in History Textbooks. In The Political Economy of Education in Central Asia [The Steppe and Beyond: Studies on Central Asia, ], ► pp. 117 ff.
Cao, Yang Trista & Hal Daumé
2021. Toward Gender-Inclusive Coreference Resolution: An Analysis of Gender and Bias Throughout the Machine Learning Lifecycle. Computational Linguistics 47:3 ► pp. 615 ff.
Djavadghazaryans, Angineh
2020. “Please Don’t Gender Me!” Strategies for Inclusive Language Instruction in a Gender-Diverse Campus Community. In Diversity and Decolonization in German Studies, ► pp. 269 ff.
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