海角大神

海角大神 / Text

When words get 鈥榞irl cooties鈥

A word that starts out as a neutral or even positive term for men聽feminizes聽(becomes exclusively identified with women) and often聽辫别箩辞谤补迟别蝉听(gets worse).

By Melissa Mohr

In the 1939 film 鈥淕one with the Wind,鈥 Ashley Wilkes, icon of intellectual masculinity, is played by the dashing actor Leslie Howard. Ashley and Leslie are now both girls鈥 names. Since 2000, all the babies given these names 鈥 100 percent 鈥 have been female, according to US government statistics. This is a very quick transition, linguistically speaking, and if history is any guide, one not likely to reverse itself. Once a moniker becomes a 鈥済irl鈥檚 name,鈥 it tends to be out of the running for boys.聽

A similar transition goes on, much more slowly, with words. Linguist Geoffrey Hughes calls it 鈥渢he feminization of ambisexual terms.鈥 (鈥淎mbisexual鈥 simply indicates words that can refer to people of both sexes.) A word that starts out as a neutral or even positive term for men feminizes (becomes exclusively identified with women) and often pejorates (gets worse). Last week鈥檚 hoyden is a fairly innocuous example. In the 19th through early 20th centuries, it was a negative term for 鈥渢omboy,鈥 but when it first appeared in English in the 16th century, it referred to an ignorant or boorish man.

Scold had perhaps the longest such fall from grace. Skalds were honored Norse poets who composed and recited the sagas, but their etymological descendants are, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, women 鈥渙f ribald speech ... addicted to abusive language.鈥 Scolding was actually a crime in medieval and early modern England.

This feminization and pejoration occurs again and again with what Mr. Hughes calls 鈥渙pprobrious terms.鈥 Witch was originally gender-neutral, and before men became sorcerers or wizards, everybody practicing magic was a witch. Shrew, meaning 鈥渁 rascal or villain,鈥 was used exclusively for men in the Middle Ages 鈥 Pontius Pilate was described as a 鈥渟hrew鈥 鈥 before it came to mean 鈥渁 woman given to scolding,鈥 as in Shakespeare鈥檚 鈥淭he Taming of the Shrew.鈥 Harlot was originally a term for a lower-class man, a jester or vagabond, but by the early 16th century referred to a sexually loose woman. As with harlot, the feminization of a word often happens when sexual immorality becomes part of its definition. 聽

The feminization of ambisexual terms seems to me to reflect the logic of cooties. Traditionally, once a word has 鈥済irl cooties,鈥 it can鈥檛 be used for boys. There is some evidence this is changing, however. A couple of our very worst 鈥渙pprobrious terms,鈥 which can鈥檛 be printed here, began life gendered female but recently have begun to be used equally for men.聽

And in the past few decades, a few given names appear to have become truly unisex. Charlie and Armani, for example, are split almost 50-50. We will see if the growing questioning of gender binaries allows these names to stay gender-neutral or if the old pattern remains in force.