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CrowdScience

Why is a ship a ‘she’?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science, Technology

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 26 July 2024

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In many languages across the world, all nouns are classed as either male or female, or sometimes neuter. The English language, however, only signals gender in its pronouns - he, she, it or they. For inanimate objects, gender just crops up in occasional examples like ships or countries, which, for some reason, are deemed female. This lack of gender in English intrigued CrowdScience listener Stuart, since the other languages he knows all highlight whether something is male or female. Did English ever have gender, and if so, where did it go? Presenter Anand Jagatia dives into some Old English texts to uncover the idiosyncrasies of its masculine and feminine nouns, and learns why these gradually fell out of use. But why do other languages assign gender to nouns – male, female, and sometimes many more categories too? And does this affect the way we think?

Contributors: Andrew Dunning, Curator of Medieval Manuscripts, Bodleian Library, Oxford University Rachel Burns, Departmental Lecturer in Old English, Oxford University Suzanne Romaine, Professor of Linguistics, Hawaii Ida Hadjivayanis, Senior Lecturer in Swahili, SOAS University Angeliki Alvanoudi, Sociolinguist, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Amy Bahulekar, Writer, Mumbai

Presenter: Anand Jagatia Producer: Eloise Stevens Editor: Cathy Edwards Production: Ishmael Soriano

Transcript

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0:00.0

He hunted at night terrorizing his victims.

0:04.5

He would appear in the dark.

0:06.5

Every single one of his victims was black.

0:08.9

He was a kill.

0:10.0

People were desperate and nobody knew where he was.

0:13.0

But despite his shocking death toll, he only served 12 years in jail.

0:17.0

The families of his victims want justice.

0:20.0

The whole scale of it, it's mesmerizing.

0:22.0

And now he's ready to talk world of secrets the

0:26.1

apartheid killer listen on BBC sounds yeah

0:31.9

yeah I can't do I'm not Yeah, Jara Kanto Joyan there,

0:34.3

okay, sorry, get it, I'm not.

0:36.3

Okay, I'm Annan Jagatier, and welcome to crowd signs from the VBC World Service.

0:41.3

Eh, me, jump, jum World Service. Eh, may jump, chai.

0:43.0

Me?

0:44.0

Moo.

0:46.0

More than day,

0:47.0

diabetes, what this time.

0:49.0

Welcome also to my mum's house,

0:51.0

where on a rainy Saturday morning morning she's making us a nice

0:54.7

cup of Indian tea. Chai. That's something that happens quite a lot when I go back

1:01.0

home but something that's much rarer is that me and my mum speak my

...

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