If I'm not mistaken, words by their lonesome are nouns; adjectives are attached to them; no attachment, not an adjective.
Wrong (adjective)
If I'm not mistaken, words by their lonesome are nouns; adjectives are attached to them; no attachment, not an adjective.
: rolleyes : : rolleyes : *10 ... : rolleyes : ; )
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjective
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postpositive_adjective
I guess those aren't postpositive or postnominal adjectives then. Try predicative adjectives instead.
: rolleyes :
So what? Still adjectives, not nouns.
The daft thing is, "male" and "female" are basically adjectives that have been used as nouns for so long that they're accepted as such. Like "human". (Human is less well accepted. I was always taught in scientific writing to write either "human being" or "man".)
German does it better. It nounifies adjectives all over the damn shop, making translations quite stilted sometimes.
Nominalized adjectives, which function as nouns. One way this happens is by eliding a noun from an adjective-noun noun phrase, whose remnant thus is a nominalization. In the sentence, "I read two books to them; he preferred the sad book, but she preferred the happy", happy is a nominalized adjective, short for "happy one" or "happy book".
LoL. And calling a dog's tail a leg makes it one:Too bad there's evidence, then.
Yes. You claimed they were nouns, and that damion was wrong to try to use them as adjectives in that position.
So you were wrong, and damion was right to use "male" as an adjective in that position.
In what sense, then, are these sex organs in the bucket male?
LoL. And calling a dog's tail a leg makes it one:
https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/abraham_lincoln_107482
And calling Laurel Hubbard a female makes "her" one:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurel_Hubbard
I rather doubt he intended it as such. He clearly wanted - still wants apparently - to make "male children" mean that they actually are males, i.e., those with functioning testicles - according to the standard biological definitions prescribed by Parker & Lehtonen in the Journal of Molecular Human Reproduction ...
But - perchance, en passant - do you have any similar prescriptive definitions by credible biologists in credible biological journals that endorse that structure-absent-function schlock of Heying, Hilton, & Wright?![]()
LoL. So what?Male is an adjective, my dude. Get used to it.
male noun
plural males
Definition of male (Entry 2 of 2)
1a: a male person : a man or a boy
b: an individual of the sex that is typically capable of producing small, usually motile gametes (such as sperm or spermatozoa) which fertilize the eggs of a female
Neither Parker nor Lehtonen have disclaimed calling babies male or female.He clearly wanted - still wants apparently - to make "male children" mean that they actually are males, i.e., those with functioning testicles - according to the standard biological definitions prescribed by Parker & Lehtonen in the Journal of Molecular Human Reproduction
Adjectives still aren't magic wands as you seem to think is the case. Attaching them to nouns doesn't automatically bestow any additional properties to those nouns.
LoL. So what?
Adjectives still aren't magic wands as you seem to think is the case. Attaching them to nouns doesn't automatically bestow any additional properties to those nouns.
If that were really the case then calling Hubbard a "female weight-lifter" would have changed his sex from male to female.
Also, FYI, "male" is also a noun:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/male
"I'll take motivated reasoning for $600 please Alex."Neither Parker nor Lehtonen have disclaimed calling babies male or female.
Nouns are words. Bestowing additional properties to nouns is exactly what adjectives do.
I think what you might have meant to say is that adjectives don't automatically bestow additional properties to the things nouns might refer to. But, since you're insisting on being all precise about definitions...
You're evading the question, more particularly, the difference between nouns and adjectives.I'm not Emma Hilton.
There is nothing wrong with her definition, but you fail to understand that there are different ways of looking at this.
A forensic archaeologist might look at a pelvic bone and say, that is a female pelvic bone. You can complain that he should have said, that is a pelvic bone that was once part of a female body. Except you can't know that that body every produced ova so I really don't know what you'd want the archaeologist to say.
It's possible to look at a cell that has a nucleus and determine its sex from its chromosomal complement. You can say that cell is male or female. And get this, it might be that that cell is part of a body that is the opposite sex from the body it's part of. See these pesky freemartins again.
This is all perfectly simple and understood by anyone who knows anything about mammalian biology.
Neither Parker nor Lehtonen have claimed to be crafting intensional definitions.Try searching for and reading my comments on intensional definitions.
Neither Parker nor Lehtonen have claimed to be crafting intensional definitions.
...LoL. So what?
Adjectives still aren't magic wands as you seem to think is the case. Attaching them to nouns doesn't automatically bestow any additional properties to those nouns.
If that were really the case then calling Hubbard a "female weight-lifter" would have changed his sex from male to female.
Also, FYI, "male" is also a noun:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/male
