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Copyright

Na‘ama Pat-El;

Published On

2025-03-07

Page Range

pp. 631–660

Language

  • English

Print Length

30 pages

The Gender of Paired Body Parts in Semitic

  • Na‘ama Pat-El (author)
The study investigates the gender assignment of nouns denoting paired body parts in Semitic languages. While earlier theories suggested a systematic assignment of feminine gender to paired body parts, the evidence demonstrates significant inconsistencies. Across various Semitic branches, nouns for paired body parts often fluctuate in gender, with some being masculine, feminine, or both depending on context and language. This variation undermines claims that gender assignment for these nouns is referential or semantically driven. Instead, the distribution appears random and reflects broader patterns of arbitrary gender assignment in Semitic grammar. The findings challenge hypotheses that link feminine gender to dual morphology or innate features of paired body parts and instead support the view that gender assignment in inanimate nouns is non-referential and determined by historical and morphological factors.

Contributors

Na‘ama Pat-El

(author)
Professor of Semitic languages at The University of Texas at Austin

Na‘ama Pat-El (PhD, Harvard University) is Professor of Semitic languages at the University of Texas, Austin. Her main professional areas of interest are syntactic change, language contact, and historical linguistics. She studied at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem under Gideon Goldenberg and at Harvard University under John Huehnergard. Among her most recent publications the co-edited volumes Historical Linguistics and Endangered Languages: Exploring Diversity in Language Change (Routledge, 2021), Bēl Lišāni: Current Research in Akkadian Linguistics (Eisenbrauns, 2021), and The Semitic Languages (2nd ed., Abingdon, 2019).