• djsoren19@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    13 hours ago

    Well it works for this example, because lave-vaisselle is feminine. The root vasselle (dishes) is feminine.

    • FundMECFS@anarchist.nexus
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      12 hours ago

      vaiselle is actually inhereting its gender in an unrelated manner.

      It comes from Latin vāscellum which is a Neuter noun.

      But the specific form that gave rise to vaiselle was the collective plural of that noun vāscella. source

      And it’s a common pattern that in vulgar latin, (what gave rise to french), collective plural nouns were interpreted as feminine. I think this is a general tendency and unrelated to the noun’s meaning. The reason often given is that neuter plural endings and feminine singular endings were the same in Latin.

      BTW; this is also the latin root of the english word vessel.

      (PS: I agree with you that gender in language is problematic and I prefer non gendered as well).