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He or She?

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  • A ankita patel 0

    A colleague of mine just wrote me something like "greate man ....." and I had to reply "it's great woman ......." :-D In this days of globalization, when you just know the name of your colleague, working on the other side of the world, how do you figure, whether the person is male or female? just curious, because with experience you become familiar with the names in the different cultures, but initially it might be tough. Ankita work to live better, don't live to work better!

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    Prakash Nadar
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    i get really confused with chinese names.


    -Prakash

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    • A ankita patel 0

      A colleague of mine just wrote me something like "greate man ....." and I had to reply "it's great woman ......." :-D In this days of globalization, when you just know the name of your colleague, working on the other side of the world, how do you figure, whether the person is male or female? just curious, because with experience you become familiar with the names in the different cultures, but initially it might be tough. Ankita work to live better, don't live to work better!

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      Jorgen Sigvardsson
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      ankita patel wrote:

      how do you figure, whether the person is male or female?

      If I am unsure, and if it's relevant, I ask. :)

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      • I Impega

        From what I cam remember 'man' ment person in ye very olde english and through the years has come to represent male and 'woman' is a derivative of 'man' (or something like this....)

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        DaTxomin
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        You are partially correct. It is not derived but composed with. The word "woman" comes from the old English "wifman" (wife + man).

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        • D DaTxomin

          You are partially correct. It is not derived but composed with. The word "woman" comes from the old English "wifman" (wife + man).

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          Impega
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          thats it.....thanks..

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          • A ankita patel 0

            A colleague of mine just wrote me something like "greate man ....." and I had to reply "it's great woman ......." :-D In this days of globalization, when you just know the name of your colleague, working on the other side of the world, how do you figure, whether the person is male or female? just curious, because with experience you become familiar with the names in the different cultures, but initially it might be tough. Ankita work to live better, don't live to work better!

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            Monty2
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            A friend of mine is named "Vivek" he often write his name (generally in mail sigs) as "viv" and a lot of times he is confused as a female, ppl generally think vivian when they see "viv" . so once a US guy met him for the first time he was like :wtf: i thought u were a women X| hehe


            C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg

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            • A ankita patel 0

              A colleague of mine just wrote me something like "greate man ....." and I had to reply "it's great woman ......." :-D In this days of globalization, when you just know the name of your colleague, working on the other side of the world, how do you figure, whether the person is male or female? just curious, because with experience you become familiar with the names in the different cultures, but initially it might be tough. Ankita work to live better, don't live to work better!

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              Member 96
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              I always guess if there is a vowel at the end of a name it's a female name, but I know that's often wrong. I'm hopeless with asian names completely, no idea at all. I just assume they could be male or female or anywhere between and avoid gender pronouns. I don't think there is enough time in the world for anyone to get a feeling for this and in many cultures a name can be male or female with very little difference which is just more confusion. The best way to tell if a person is male or female is by how they write their text and construct their sentences. If they say "yeah" vs "yes"...that kind of thing. I've always thought it would be an interesting project to write software to guess that kind of thing, I think there are definite patterns that give it away, just a gut feeling though.

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              • M Member 96

                I always guess if there is a vowel at the end of a name it's a female name, but I know that's often wrong. I'm hopeless with asian names completely, no idea at all. I just assume they could be male or female or anywhere between and avoid gender pronouns. I don't think there is enough time in the world for anyone to get a feeling for this and in many cultures a name can be male or female with very little difference which is just more confusion. The best way to tell if a person is male or female is by how they write their text and construct their sentences. If they say "yeah" vs "yes"...that kind of thing. I've always thought it would be an interesting project to write software to guess that kind of thing, I think there are definite patterns that give it away, just a gut feeling though.

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                ankita patel 0
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                could that be the use of "yeah" instead of "yes" sometimes? :doh: :-D

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                • A ankita patel 0

                  could that be the use of "yeah" instead of "yes" sometimes? :doh: :-D

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                  Member 96
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  I've noticed in general that women tend to use "yes" or "no" where men tend to use some kind of slang or just "yeah" or "ok" etc. But it's not a solid rule, just one of many clues. I tend to think of it as irrelvant for the most part. I've been posting messages online since way before the internet was mainstream on relay mail bulletin boards in the '80s so I'm probably not a typical person for this kind of thing.

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                  • M Member 96

                    I've noticed in general that women tend to use "yes" or "no" where men tend to use some kind of slang or just "yeah" or "ok" etc. But it's not a solid rule, just one of many clues. I tend to think of it as irrelvant for the most part. I've been posting messages online since way before the internet was mainstream on relay mail bulletin boards in the '80s so I'm probably not a typical person for this kind of thing.

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                    ankita patel 0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    yeah in general your are right! I just use "yeah" and "nope" sometimes, as "yes" and "no" sounds plain dull. :) Ankita

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                    • M Member 96

                      I always guess if there is a vowel at the end of a name it's a female name, but I know that's often wrong. I'm hopeless with asian names completely, no idea at all. I just assume they could be male or female or anywhere between and avoid gender pronouns. I don't think there is enough time in the world for anyone to get a feeling for this and in many cultures a name can be male or female with very little difference which is just more confusion. The best way to tell if a person is male or female is by how they write their text and construct their sentences. If they say "yeah" vs "yes"...that kind of thing. I've always thought it would be an interesting project to write software to guess that kind of thing, I think there are definite patterns that give it away, just a gut feeling though.

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                      Vikram A Punathambekar
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      John Cardinal wrote:

                      I always guess if there is a vowel at the end of a name it's a female name, but I know that's often wrong.

                      Your guess would be mostly correct, as far as Indian names go. There are very few male names that end with a vowel, and very few female names that don't. Cheers, Vikram.


                      "When I read in books about a "base class", I figured this was the class that was at the bottom of the inheritence tree. It's the "base", right? Like the base of a pyramid." - Marc Clifton.

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