Citations:gender




 * 1986, Edward Stankiewicz, The Slavic Languages: Unity in Diversity ISBN 3110099047, page 134:
 * This narrowing of the semantic range of the animate gender involves in literary Czech not only nouns which are referentially inanimate (e.g. names of toys, drinks, mushrooms, card games), but also nouns which are "by nature" animate,
 * 1995, Judith Lorber, Paradoxes of Gender, page ix:
 * I made a distinction between gender as a social phenomenon and the social phenomenon of biological sex.


 * 1993, David Spurr, The Rhetoric of Empire: Colonial Discourse in Journalism, Travel Writing, and Imperial Administration, page 187:
 * The annals of colonial history offer relatively few such encounters between women, and it may be that gender has created here a marginal space in which something like an actual dialogue is possible between British and Sudanese.


 * 2005, Colin Renfrew, Paul Bahn, Archaeology: The Key Concepts, page 131:
 * Even with some adamant processualists, however, gender has made inroads.