Definition of gendered in English:
gendered
adjective ˈdʒɛndədˈjendərd
Relating or specific to people of one particular gender.
Example sentencesExamples
- The specifics of the gendered division of society were a middle-class luxury.
- Another shortfall is the way it has been gendered, something evident in all linguistic movements.
- That bias is gendered in that women face more demands than men on the home front when a spouse or children are present.
- This gendered language marginalizes female competitors by reducing our identity.
- The gendered, traditional model is waning, but equal sharing has not become dominant.
- Additionally, the new inclusivity in labour historiography may have specific effects in gendered maritime history.
- If the Doppelgänger is indeed gendered male, then it frequently embodies gender trouble for the masculine subject.
- The gendered colour schemes and tribal patterns also embody stability of identity in a culture constantly on the move.
- Playing with cars, trains or aeroplanes was definitely a gendered occupation.
- But she herself brought beliefs about gendered relations that I was unable to affect.
- This practice is perpetuated by women, but justified in gendered terms.
- I have gotten to the point where I just don't go into gendered spaces.
- Two other poems suggest a similar male response to the complexities of negotiating a gendered world.
- It has also attempted to examine the ways in which gendered norms are encoded in the values conveyed by these sites.
- The paradoxical implication is of a specific radicalized and gendered tabula rasa.
- Other labels draw attention to the organization of the space in the camp and to the gendered division of labor.
- Rather, war is a gendered activity with specific, frequently subordinate, positions for women.
- Enclosures are gendered spaces, with the external kitchen area a female realm.
- Men are also gendered beings, and are affected in negative ways through the social construction of masculinity.
- His idea of the female principle was not a sexist gendered notion of the passive female.