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Doubly Gendered
Nouns Whose Meanings Change with Their Gender

Nearly all nouns in Spanish are always masculine or always feminine. But there are a few nouns that can be either.

In most cases, those are the nouns describing what people do, and the gender varies with the person the word stands for. Thus, for example, el dentista refers to a male dentist, while la dentista refers to a female dentist.

But there are a few nouns where the matter of gender is more complicated. Those are the nouns whose meanings vary depending on the gender of articles or adjectives used with them. In most cases, there's little logical reason why one meaning has developed with the masculine gender and another meaning for the feminine, so the only ways to learn them is to memorize them or use them until you know them.

Here's a list of the most common such words. Only the basic or most usual meanings are included here; consult a dictionary for more thorough definitions.

Word Masculine meaning Feminine meaning
batería male drummer battery, female drummer
capital capital (money) capital (city)
cólera cholera anger
coma coma comma
cometa comet kite
consonante rhyme consonant
corte cut, blade court (law)
cura priest cure
delta delta (of a river) delta (Greek letter)
doblez fold, crease double dealing
editorial editorial publishing business
escucha listening device 1 the act of listening
final end sports final
frente front forehead
guardia policeman protection, custody, guard, police force, policewoman
guía male guide guidebook, female guide
mañana future morning
margen margin bank (as of a river)
moral blackberry bush morale, morality
orden order (opposite of chaos) religious order
ordenanza method, command orderly
papa pope potato
parte message portion
pendiente earring slope
pez fish tar or pitch
policía policeman police force, policewoman
radio radius, radium radio 2
terminal electrical terminal shipping terminal
trompeta male trumpeter trumpet, female trumpeter
vista male customers officer view, female customs officer
vocal committee member vowel

Footnotes:

1. Some authorities indicate that escucha is feminine in all uses.
2. In some areas, radio is masculine in all uses.


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