Masculine
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Etymology
Latin masculinus, from masculus male, manly, diminutive of mas a male: compare French masculin. See Male.
Adjective
masculine
- Of the male sex; not female.
- Quotations
- Thy masculine children, that is to say, thy sons - Chaucer
- Quotations
- Having the qualities of a man; suitable to, or characteristic of, a man; virile; not feminine or effeminate; strong; robust.
- Quotations
- That lady, after her husband's death, held the reins with a masculine energy - Hallam
- Quotations
- (Rare): Belonging to males; appropriated to, or used by, males
- Quotations
- A masculine church - Fuller
- Quotations
- (Grammar): Having the inflections of, or construed with, words pertaining especially to male beings, as distinguished from feminine and neuter. See gender
Derived terms
- masculinely, adverb
- masculineness, noun
Translations
- Chinese: 阳性 (yángxìng, 4)
- Dutch: mannelijk n
- Esperanto: virseksa
- Finnish: miespuolinen (1), miehekäs (2), miehuullinen (2), maskuliininen (2), miesten (3, genitive), maskuliininen (4), maskuliini- (4, prefix in a compound)
- French: masculin m
- Frisian: manlik
- German: männlich
- Greek, Modern:αρσενικό (el; arsenikó)
- Hebrew: זכר (ZVR)
- Interlingua: masculin
- Japanese: 男性 (dansei)
- Latin: masculus (1, 2, 3), masculinus (4)
- Portuguese: masculino m, masculina f
- Spanish: masculino m, masculina f