female
English

Etymology
Category:English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European#FEMALECategory:English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰeh₁(y)-#FEMALEFrom Middle EnglishCategory:English terms inherited from Middle English#FEMALECategory:English terms derived from Middle English#FEMALE female, an alteration of Middle English femele, from Old FrenchCategory:English terms derived from Old French#FEMALE femele, femelle (“female”), from Medieval LatinCategory:English terms derived from Medieval Latin#FEMALE fēmella (“a female”), from LatinCategory:English terms derived from Latin#FEMALE fēmella (“a girl, a young female, a young woman”), diminutive of fēmina (“a woman”). The English spelling and pronunciation were remodelled under the influence of male, which is otherwise not etymologically related. Contrast woman, which is etymologically built on man (as in, “person”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
female (not generally comparable, comparative femaler or more female, superlative femalest or most female)Category:English lemmas#FEMALECategory:English adjectives#FEMALECategory:English entries with incorrect language header#FEMALECategory:Pages with entries#FEMALECategory:Pages with 3 entries#FEMALE
- Belonging to the sex which typically produces eggs (ova), or to the gender which is typically associated with it. [from 14th c.]
- female authors, the leading male and female artists, a female bird cooing at a maleCategory:English terms with usage examples#FEMALE
- 1997, Vicki León, Uppity Women of Medieval Times, Conari Press, →ISBN, page 2:
- Twice in her thirty-year career she held office in the blacksmiths' guild. Ms. [Fya] upper Bach was no fluke, either: legal and guild records from medieval Germany list other female blacksmiths, coppersmiths, tinsmiths, and pewterers. Some of these redoubtable women gained entry into the guild through "widow's rights"; others, however, made it on sheer mettle and muscle.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- 2017, Rick Riordan, Magnus Chase and the Hammer of Thor, →ISBN, page 271:
- I turned to [gender-fluid] Alex. "Hey, are you female today? [...] The Skofnung Sword [...] can't be drawn in the presence of women."Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- 2025 March 23, Libby Brooks and Severin Carrell, “‘Hostile environment’ drives many of SNP’s female MSPs to step down before 2026 vote”, in The Guardian:
- Some mentioned factional tensions and bullying within the party involving other female MSPs.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:female.
- Characteristic of this sex/gender. (Compare feminine, womanly.)
- stereotypically female pastimes, an insect with typically female colorationCategory:English terms with usage examples#FEMALE
- 1987, Don't Shoot[,] Darling!: Women's Independent Filmmaking in Australia, page 350:
- A travelling shot of a harbour view near Sydney's White Bay moves into a domestic interior as a female voice says, 'There was nowhere else to live except alone.'Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- 2004, Mino Vianello, Gwen Moore, Women and Men in Political and Business Elites: A Comparative Study, →ISBN:
- More than that, we cannot find the same dynamics within female career trajectories as in the other two country groups, because the time-structure of female and male careers already shows great similarity within the older generation of elites. In addition, the pattern of the relation between female and male careers remains the same over time.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:female.
- Tending to lead to or regulate the development of sexual characteristics typical of this sex.
- the female chromosomeCategory:English terms with collocations#FEMALE
- estrogen, the primary female sex hormone, is produced by both females and malesCategory:English terms with usage examples#FEMALE
- (grammarCategory:en:Grammar#FEMALE, less common than 'feminine') Feminine; of the feminine grammatical gender.
- 2012, Naomi McIlwraith, Kiyâm: Poems, →ISBN, page 43:
- The teacher's voice inflects the pulse of nêhiyawêwin as he teaches us. He says a prayer in the first class. Nouns, we learn, have a gender. In French, nouns are male or female, but in Cree, nouns are living or non-living, animate or inanimate.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- 2012, Sinéad Leleu, Michaela Greck-Ismair, German Pen Pals Made Easy KS3:
- If you are describing a female noun, you must make the adjective feminine by adding an 'e'. If you describe a male noun, you add an 'er'. For neutral nouns you add an 'es'.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- (of bacteria) Lacking the F factor, and able to receive DNA from another bacterium which does have this factor (a male).
- 2021 February 26, Gregor Majdic, Soul Mate Biology: Science of attachment and love, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 10:
- In this process, one bacterium designated the male bacterium transfers its DNA into the female bacterium. Bacteria are determined to be male or female by a small piece of DNA, called F-plasmid, or sex factor. Bacteria with this small piece of DNA are labeled as males, and bacteria that do not have this factor are considered females.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- (figuratively) Having an internal socket, as in a connector or pipe fitting. [from 16th c.]
- 1993, Ed Sarviel, Construction Estimating Reference Data, →ISBN, page 284:
- A ground-joint union is made in three separate pieces and is used for joining two pipes. It consists of two machined pieces with female pipe threads, which are screwed on the pipes to be united, and a threaded collar which holds the two pieces of the union together.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
- male; androgynous; intersex; non-binary
- (grammar): see feminine
Derived terms
- (see below)
Translations
Category:Entries with translation boxes#FEMALE
|
Noun
female (plural females)Category:English lemmas#FEMALECategory:English nouns#FEMALECategory:English countable nouns#FEMALECategory:English entries with incorrect language header#FEMALECategory:Pages with entries#FEMALECategory:Pages with 3 entries#FEMALE
- One of the female (feminine) sex or gender.
- An animal of the sex that produces eggs.
- 1983, Richard Ellis, The Book of Sharks, Knopf, →ISBN, page 36:
- Accumulated data indicate that in all species of sharks, the females grow larger than the males.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- (sometimes proscribedCategory:English proscribed terms#FEMALE) A human of feminine gender; a girl or woman.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:female
- Hyponyms: girl, woman; see also Thesaurus:girl, Thesaurus:woman
- 1896, John Brown, Twenty-five Years a Parson in the Wild West, page 57:
- It would be years sometimes ere he saw the face of a female, and when he did, that face would not be overangelic.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- 2004, Eric Vilain, Edward R.nbsp, B. McCabe, “DAX1 and X-Linked Adrenal Hypoplasia Congenita and XY Sex Reversal”, in Charles J. Epstein, Robert P. Erickson, Anthony Wynshaw-Boris, editors, Inborn Errors of Development: The Molecular Basis of Clinical Disorders of Morphogenesis, New York: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 508:
- XY female patients with gonadal dysgenesis are sometimes referred to as “XY sex-reversed” patients or individuals with “XY sex reversal” (Simpson and Martin, 1981). Although widely used, this terminology is somewhat vague as it does not distinguish XY females with gonadal dysgenesis from XY females with androgen resistance.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- (botanyCategory:en:Botany#FEMALE) A plant which produces only that kind of reproductive organ capable of developing into fruit after impregnation or fertilization; a pistillate plant.
- An animal of the sex that produces eggs.
- A bacterium which lacks the F factor, and is able to receive DNA from another bacterium which has that factor.
- 2001 August 1, Harrison G. Echols, Operators and Promoters: The Story of Molecular Biology and Its Creators, Univ of California Press, →ISBN, page 45:
- During mating, F+ male bacteria transfer the F factor to the recipient females, transforming them into F+ males.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
- A female connector, pipe fitting, etc.
- 2009, Fire Engineering's Handbook for Firefighter I and II, Fire Engineering Books, →ISBN, page 412:
- These are the most common type, as they join females of the same diameter together. […] For example, you may need an adapter such as a 3-in. pipe thread (a common thread used to join pipes) female to 2 1⁄2 NH male.Category:English terms with quotations#FEMALE
Usage notes
- Due to its inclusion of non-human animals, some, like Time magazine's Jay Newton-Small and former Jezebel contributor Kara Brown, find it dehumanizing and disparaging to refer to female humans as "female(s)" as a noun, especially in non-technical, informal contexts. Others, like Buzzfeed's Heben Nigatu and Tracy Clayton, have criticized it as being overly used for women compared to the use of "male(s)" for men.[1][2][3] It is frequently used in police blotters, dispatches, reports, and legal, medical, or physiological documents to encompass girls and women.
Derived terms
- all-female
- alpha female
- antifemale
- anti-female
- beta female
- bio-female
- biofemale
- bio female
- cis-female
- cis female
- classic female blues
- delta female
- female alpha
- female-assigned
- female-centric
- female chauvinism
- female chauvinist
- female circumcision
- female condom
- female dog
- femaledom
- female-dominated
- female ejaculate
- female ejaculation
- female gaze
- female genital cutting
- female genital mutilation
- female ginseng
- femalehood
- female hysteria
- female impersonation
- female impersonator
- femaleist
- femaleless
- femalelike
- female line
- female lineage
- femalely
- femaleness
- female pattern baldness
- female prostate
- female rhyme
- female tank
- female-to-male
- femalish
- femalism
- femalist
- femalization
- femalize
- fembot
- femcee
- femcel
- femfan
- FemHawke
- femismo
- femocrat
- femoid
- Femquisitor
- feMRA
- femsub
- femullet
- gamma female
- hefemale
- heterofemale
- interfemale
- isofemale
- male-to-female
- metafemale
- multifemale
- neofemale
- nonfemale
- omega female
- sensitive female chord progression
- shaved female genitalia
- superfemale
- trans female
- trans-female
- transfemale
- trans-identified female
- unfemale
Translations
Category:Entries with translation boxes#FEMALE
|
See also
- ♀ (symbol for female)
- sex, gender, gender identity
References
- ↑ “Opinion | Language: Woman vs. female”, in The New York Times, 18 March 2007, →ISSN, retrieved 20 January 2022
- ↑ “Why We Need to Reclaim the Word 'Female'”, in Time, 20 April 2016, →ISSN, retrieved 20 January 2022
- ↑ “The Problem With Calling Women 'Females'”, in Jezebel, 15 February 2015, retrieved 10 May 2024
Further reading
- Michael Quinion (2004), “Female”, in Ballyhoo, Buckaroo, and Spuds: Ingenious Tales of Words and Their Origins, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books in association with Penguin Books, →ISBN.
Middle English
Adjective
femaleCategory:Middle English alternative forms#FEMALECategory:Middle English entries with incorrect language header#FEMALECategory:Pages with entries#FEMALECategory:Pages with 3 entries#FEMALE
- alternative form of femele
Noun
femaleCategory:Middle English alternative forms#FEMALECategory:Middle English entries with incorrect language header#FEMALECategory:Pages with entries#FEMALECategory:Pages with 3 entries#FEMALE
- alternative form of femele
Spanish
Verb
femaleCategory:Spanish non-lemma forms#FEMALECategory:Spanish verb forms#FEMALECategory:Spanish entries with incorrect language header#FEMALECategory:Pages with entries#FEMALECategory:Pages with 3 entries#FEMALE
- second-person singular voseo imperative of femar combined with le
