joeldruark-patch-1 (#662)

Reviewed-on: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/pulls/662
Co-authored-by: Joel D. Ruark <joeldruark@noreply.door43.org>
Co-committed-by: Joel D. Ruark <joeldruark@noreply.door43.org>
This commit is contained in:
Joel D. Ruark 2022-01-02 21:59:24 +00:00
parent a70101d89a
commit 23a29cf3e5
10 changed files with 33 additions and 52 deletions

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:github_url: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/src/branch/master/content/gender_both.rst
.. _gender_both:
Gender Both
===========
Summary
-------
A word is classified as "both gender" if it contains both a masculine
and a feminine form, or if a single form is masculine in
some contexts and feminine in other contexts.
.. include:: includes/gender_both-summary.rst
Article
-------
Some words appear in both a
:ref:`masculine<gender_masculine>`
and a
:ref:`feminine<gender_feminine>`
form. Other words have only one form, but that single form can be either
grammatically-masculine or grammatically-feminine. These kinds of words
are classified as "gender both", and they are usually nouns or
adjectives. Sometimes the context can determine the gender of a
particular instance of a "gender both" noun (see examples below for
שֶׁמֶשׁ), but sometimes the context is inconclusive (see example below for
נֹגַהּ).
.. include:: includes/gender_both-article.rst
Examples
--------
A single word with both masculine and feminine forms
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In the following example, the noun אוֹר (light) is masculine in form and
takes grammatically-masculine verbs (יְהִ֣י and וַֽיְהִי).
@ -55,7 +34,6 @@ takes a grammatically-feminine verb (הָֽיְתָ֥ה).
A single form that can be either masculine or feminine
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In the following example, the noun שֶׁמֶשׁ (sun) is grammatically
feminine.

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:github_url: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/src/branch/master/content/gender_common.rst
.. _gender_common:
Gender Common
=============
Summary
-------
A word is classified as "common gender" if it can refer to either a
grammatically-masculine or a grammatically-feminine person/thing.
.. include:: includes/gender_common-summary.rst
Article
-------
A word is parsed as "common" (in other systems sometimes "unmarked"),
when it has potential to refer to either a
:ref:`masculine<gender_masculine>`
or a
:ref:`feminine<gender_feminine>`
person or thing. Words classified as "common gender" are usually
pronouns or verbs.
.. include:: includes/gender_common-article.rst
Examples
--------
In Biblical Hebrew, :ref:`1st person<person_first>` :ref:`personal pronouns<pronoun_personal>` are "gender common".
.. include:: includes/gender_common-1stpronoun.rst
.. csv-table:: Example: 1KI 18:22
אֲנִ֞י נֹותַ֧רְתִּי נָבִ֛יא לַיהוָ֖ה
@ -34,8 +18,7 @@ In Biblical Hebrew, :ref:`1st person<person_first>` :ref:`personal pronouns<pron
**I** I-am-left prophet for-Yahweh
"I, **I alone**, am left as a prophet of Yahweh"
In Biblical Hebrew, :ref:`finite verbs<verb-finite>` in 1st person conjugation are "gender common".
.. include:: includes/gender_common-1stverb.rst
.. csv-table:: Example: ISA 2:5
בֵּ֖ית יַעֲקֹ֑ב לְכ֥וּ **וְנֵלְכָ֖ה** בְּא֥וֹר יְהוָֽה
@ -44,7 +27,6 @@ In Biblical Hebrew, :ref:`finite verbs<verb-finite>` in 1st person conjugation a
"House of Jacob, come, **and let us walk** in the light of Yahweh."
In Biblical Hebrew, the plural :ref:`demonstrative pronoun<pronoun_demonstrative>` is "gender common".
.. csv-table:: Example: ISA 28:7
וְגַם־\ **אֵ֨לֶּה֙** בַּיַּ֣יִן שָׁג֔וּ

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@ -7,14 +7,10 @@ Gender Feminine
Summary
-------
Nouns, adjectives, finite verbs, participles, pronouns, pronominal suffixes, and some particles change their form is according to
their grammatical gender, either masculine or feminine. The feminine gender is often marked by either a ־ָה (qamets-he) or וֹת
(holem-taw) suffix, but various other prefixes and suffixes can also indicate feminine gender.
.. include:: includes/gender_feminine-summary.rst
.. include:: includes/hebrew/gender_feminine-summary-hebrew.rst
Article
-------
In Biblical Hebrew, :ref:`nouns<noun>` are classified according to gender, either :ref:`masculine<gender_masculine>`, feminine, or
sometimes :ref:`both<gender_both>`. Grammatical modifiers (such as :ref:`adjectives<adjective>`, :ref:`active<participle_active>`
and :ref:`passive<participle_passive>` participles, :ref:`pronouns<pronoun>`, :ref:`pronominal suffixes<suffix_pronominal>`)

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Some words appear in both a :ref:`masculine<gender_masculine>`
and a :ref:`feminine<gender_feminine>` form.
Other words have only one form,
but that single form can be either grammatically-masculine or grammatically-feminine.
These kinds of words are classified as "gender both", and they are usually nouns or adjectives.
Sometimes the context can determine the gender of a particular instance of a "gender both" noun,
but sometimes the context is inconclusive.

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A word is classified as "both gender" if it contains both a masculine
and a feminine form, or if a single form is masculine in
some contexts and feminine in other contexts.

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In both Biblical Hebrew and Biblical Aramaic,
:ref:`1st person<person_first>` :ref:`personal pronouns<pronoun_personal>` are "gender common".

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In both Biblical Hebrew and Biblical Aramaic,
:ref:`finite verbs<verb-finite>` in 1st person conjugation are "gender common".

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A word is parsed as "common" (in other systems sometimes "unmarked"),
when it has potential to refer to either a
:ref:`masculine<gender_masculine>`
or a
:ref:`feminine<gender_feminine>`
person or thing. Words classified as "common gender" are usually
pronouns or verbs.

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@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
A word is classified as "common gender" if it can refer to either a
grammatically-masculine or a grammatically-feminine person/thing.

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@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
Nouns, adjectives, finite verbs, participles, pronouns, pronominal suffixes, and some particles change their form is according to
their grammatical gender, either masculine or feminine.