Is the phrase professor emerita grammatically correct?











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Since professor has masculine gender, one may think that the phrase should be professor emeritus, regardless of the gender of the person referred to. Is the use of emerita simply a case of grammatical ignorance?










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    up vote
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    down vote

    favorite












    Since professor has masculine gender, one may think that the phrase should be professor emeritus, regardless of the gender of the person referred to. Is the use of emerita simply a case of grammatical ignorance?










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    Phill Schultz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.






















      up vote
      6
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      6
      down vote

      favorite











      Since professor has masculine gender, one may think that the phrase should be professor emeritus, regardless of the gender of the person referred to. Is the use of emerita simply a case of grammatical ignorance?










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Phill Schultz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      Since professor has masculine gender, one may think that the phrase should be professor emeritus, regardless of the gender of the person referred to. Is the use of emerita simply a case of grammatical ignorance?







      grammar-choice genus






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      Phill Schultz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      edited yesterday









      Joonas Ilmavirta

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      44.2k1056253






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      New contributor





      Phill Schultz is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          3 Answers
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          up vote
          8
          down vote













          In theory, the feminine of professor would be profestrix. However, this is a rather awkward formation, and isn't attested classically—the use of -trix on a dental-stem noun is incredibly rare in any period.



          So most often, in my experience at least, the word professor is used for both the masculine and the feminine. If the professor is female, the noun is feminine, and thus takes a first-declension adjective like emerita. (For a Classical precedent, see gender-neutral third-declension nouns like homo and canis.)






          share|improve this answer

















          • 1




            By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
            – Persistence
            11 hours ago






          • 1




            @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
            – Draconis
            11 hours ago












          • @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            2 hours ago


















          up vote
          4
          down vote













          To supplement the answer by Draconis, professor is what's called a common gender noun, at least in modern usage.
          This means that the grammatical gender is not fixed, but depends on the semantic gender.
          When referring to a male professor, professor is masculine, and feminine when referring to female.
          I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders.



          The form professor emerita is correct.
          While there is the feminine option profestrix emerita, this form is not really used.
          The word profestrix is the Latin equivalent of the French professeure, but appears to be far less common.



          Feminine forms such as doctrix and lectrix have been used and are in no way inappropriate for female academicians.
          However, it appears to be more common to use the (seemingly) masculine words doctor, lector, and professor instead.






          share|improve this answer























          • It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
            – luchonacho
            21 hours ago










          • @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            19 hours ago










          • "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
            – Vladimir F
            18 hours ago










          • @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            18 hours ago










          • @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
            – brianpck
            17 hours ago


















          up vote
          3
          down vote













          We normally distinguish between nouns of “common gender”, which can be used either as masculine or as feminine depending on the sex of the person or animal in question, and “epicene nouns", which have a fixed gender, but can refer to creatures of either sex. If “professor” is treated as epicene, then one would have to say “professor emeritus” for a person of either sex, at least in (Neo-)Latin.



          In English there are no gendered forms for adjectives, so there is no reason not to say “emeritus professor” in reference to a woman in an English context.



          In Germany there has been a heated debate over whether a female professor should be styled “Professor” or “Professorin”. In lecture lists of German universities you now normally find just “Prof.” - one way to dodge the question.






          share|improve this answer





















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            3 Answers
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            active

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            3 Answers
            3






            active

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            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

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            up vote
            8
            down vote













            In theory, the feminine of professor would be profestrix. However, this is a rather awkward formation, and isn't attested classically—the use of -trix on a dental-stem noun is incredibly rare in any period.



            So most often, in my experience at least, the word professor is used for both the masculine and the feminine. If the professor is female, the noun is feminine, and thus takes a first-declension adjective like emerita. (For a Classical precedent, see gender-neutral third-declension nouns like homo and canis.)






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
              – Persistence
              11 hours ago






            • 1




              @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
              – Draconis
              11 hours ago












            • @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              2 hours ago















            up vote
            8
            down vote













            In theory, the feminine of professor would be profestrix. However, this is a rather awkward formation, and isn't attested classically—the use of -trix on a dental-stem noun is incredibly rare in any period.



            So most often, in my experience at least, the word professor is used for both the masculine and the feminine. If the professor is female, the noun is feminine, and thus takes a first-declension adjective like emerita. (For a Classical precedent, see gender-neutral third-declension nouns like homo and canis.)






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
              – Persistence
              11 hours ago






            • 1




              @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
              – Draconis
              11 hours ago












            • @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              2 hours ago













            up vote
            8
            down vote










            up vote
            8
            down vote









            In theory, the feminine of professor would be profestrix. However, this is a rather awkward formation, and isn't attested classically—the use of -trix on a dental-stem noun is incredibly rare in any period.



            So most often, in my experience at least, the word professor is used for both the masculine and the feminine. If the professor is female, the noun is feminine, and thus takes a first-declension adjective like emerita. (For a Classical precedent, see gender-neutral third-declension nouns like homo and canis.)






            share|improve this answer












            In theory, the feminine of professor would be profestrix. However, this is a rather awkward formation, and isn't attested classically—the use of -trix on a dental-stem noun is incredibly rare in any period.



            So most often, in my experience at least, the word professor is used for both the masculine and the feminine. If the professor is female, the noun is feminine, and thus takes a first-declension adjective like emerita. (For a Classical precedent, see gender-neutral third-declension nouns like homo and canis.)







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered yesterday









            Draconis

            13.3k11655




            13.3k11655








            • 1




              By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
              – Persistence
              11 hours ago






            • 1




              @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
              – Draconis
              11 hours ago












            • @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              2 hours ago














            • 1




              By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
              – Persistence
              11 hours ago






            • 1




              @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
              – Draconis
              11 hours ago












            • @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              2 hours ago








            1




            1




            By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
            – Persistence
            11 hours ago




            By that logic could a female member of the Homo Erectus genus be referred to as a Homo Erecta?
            – Persistence
            11 hours ago




            1




            1




            @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
            – Draconis
            11 hours ago






            @Persistence Scientific names generally don't change their form, but in Latin that wouldn't be incorrect: see this question for some examples of homo used for a woman.
            – Draconis
            11 hours ago














            @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            2 hours ago




            @Persistence It would be nice to have a separate question about that so people could find the answer easily.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            2 hours ago










            up vote
            4
            down vote













            To supplement the answer by Draconis, professor is what's called a common gender noun, at least in modern usage.
            This means that the grammatical gender is not fixed, but depends on the semantic gender.
            When referring to a male professor, professor is masculine, and feminine when referring to female.
            I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders.



            The form professor emerita is correct.
            While there is the feminine option profestrix emerita, this form is not really used.
            The word profestrix is the Latin equivalent of the French professeure, but appears to be far less common.



            Feminine forms such as doctrix and lectrix have been used and are in no way inappropriate for female academicians.
            However, it appears to be more common to use the (seemingly) masculine words doctor, lector, and professor instead.






            share|improve this answer























            • It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
              – luchonacho
              21 hours ago










            • @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              19 hours ago










            • "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
              – Vladimir F
              18 hours ago










            • @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              18 hours ago










            • @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
              – brianpck
              17 hours ago















            up vote
            4
            down vote













            To supplement the answer by Draconis, professor is what's called a common gender noun, at least in modern usage.
            This means that the grammatical gender is not fixed, but depends on the semantic gender.
            When referring to a male professor, professor is masculine, and feminine when referring to female.
            I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders.



            The form professor emerita is correct.
            While there is the feminine option profestrix emerita, this form is not really used.
            The word profestrix is the Latin equivalent of the French professeure, but appears to be far less common.



            Feminine forms such as doctrix and lectrix have been used and are in no way inappropriate for female academicians.
            However, it appears to be more common to use the (seemingly) masculine words doctor, lector, and professor instead.






            share|improve this answer























            • It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
              – luchonacho
              21 hours ago










            • @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              19 hours ago










            • "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
              – Vladimir F
              18 hours ago










            • @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              18 hours ago










            • @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
              – brianpck
              17 hours ago













            up vote
            4
            down vote










            up vote
            4
            down vote









            To supplement the answer by Draconis, professor is what's called a common gender noun, at least in modern usage.
            This means that the grammatical gender is not fixed, but depends on the semantic gender.
            When referring to a male professor, professor is masculine, and feminine when referring to female.
            I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders.



            The form professor emerita is correct.
            While there is the feminine option profestrix emerita, this form is not really used.
            The word profestrix is the Latin equivalent of the French professeure, but appears to be far less common.



            Feminine forms such as doctrix and lectrix have been used and are in no way inappropriate for female academicians.
            However, it appears to be more common to use the (seemingly) masculine words doctor, lector, and professor instead.






            share|improve this answer














            To supplement the answer by Draconis, professor is what's called a common gender noun, at least in modern usage.
            This means that the grammatical gender is not fixed, but depends on the semantic gender.
            When referring to a male professor, professor is masculine, and feminine when referring to female.
            I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders.



            The form professor emerita is correct.
            While there is the feminine option profestrix emerita, this form is not really used.
            The word profestrix is the Latin equivalent of the French professeure, but appears to be far less common.



            Feminine forms such as doctrix and lectrix have been used and are in no way inappropriate for female academicians.
            However, it appears to be more common to use the (seemingly) masculine words doctor, lector, and professor instead.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 19 hours ago

























            answered yesterday









            Joonas Ilmavirta

            44.2k1056253




            44.2k1056253












            • It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
              – luchonacho
              21 hours ago










            • @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              19 hours ago










            • "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
              – Vladimir F
              18 hours ago










            • @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              18 hours ago










            • @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
              – brianpck
              17 hours ago


















            • It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
              – luchonacho
              21 hours ago










            • @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              19 hours ago










            • "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
              – Vladimir F
              18 hours ago










            • @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
              – Joonas Ilmavirta
              18 hours ago










            • @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
              – brianpck
              17 hours ago
















            It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
            – luchonacho
            21 hours ago




            It seems women have been teaching since the origin of mediaeval universities. It would be interesting to find some written evidence of their titles. I had a go but failed. Maybe you are a better searcher than me.
            – luchonacho
            21 hours ago












            @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            19 hours ago




            @luchonacho I edited my answer a bit. This old question has an example which might be in the spirit of what you are looking for. I would be interested to see follow-up questions on the topic, though.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            19 hours ago












            "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
            – Vladimir F
            18 hours ago




            "I would consider it impolite in today's world to use professor as purely masculine word for professors of all genders." That is surely English specific. But can perhaps be extended to Latin.
            – Vladimir F
            18 hours ago












            @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            18 hours ago




            @VladimirF That is certainly a matter of opinion, and I was very conscious about prefacing it with "I would consider". But since Latin does not force professor to be exclusively masculine, I would find it inappropriate to treat it as exclusively masculine in this day and age. Different languages and different people might come to other conclusions.
            – Joonas Ilmavirta
            18 hours ago












            @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
            – brianpck
            17 hours ago




            @luchonacho magistra is classically attested. Considering that in medieval universities magister was the title for the highest teachers, that might be a better route to go.
            – brianpck
            17 hours ago










            up vote
            3
            down vote













            We normally distinguish between nouns of “common gender”, which can be used either as masculine or as feminine depending on the sex of the person or animal in question, and “epicene nouns", which have a fixed gender, but can refer to creatures of either sex. If “professor” is treated as epicene, then one would have to say “professor emeritus” for a person of either sex, at least in (Neo-)Latin.



            In English there are no gendered forms for adjectives, so there is no reason not to say “emeritus professor” in reference to a woman in an English context.



            In Germany there has been a heated debate over whether a female professor should be styled “Professor” or “Professorin”. In lecture lists of German universities you now normally find just “Prof.” - one way to dodge the question.






            share|improve this answer

























              up vote
              3
              down vote













              We normally distinguish between nouns of “common gender”, which can be used either as masculine or as feminine depending on the sex of the person or animal in question, and “epicene nouns", which have a fixed gender, but can refer to creatures of either sex. If “professor” is treated as epicene, then one would have to say “professor emeritus” for a person of either sex, at least in (Neo-)Latin.



              In English there are no gendered forms for adjectives, so there is no reason not to say “emeritus professor” in reference to a woman in an English context.



              In Germany there has been a heated debate over whether a female professor should be styled “Professor” or “Professorin”. In lecture lists of German universities you now normally find just “Prof.” - one way to dodge the question.






              share|improve this answer























                up vote
                3
                down vote










                up vote
                3
                down vote









                We normally distinguish between nouns of “common gender”, which can be used either as masculine or as feminine depending on the sex of the person or animal in question, and “epicene nouns", which have a fixed gender, but can refer to creatures of either sex. If “professor” is treated as epicene, then one would have to say “professor emeritus” for a person of either sex, at least in (Neo-)Latin.



                In English there are no gendered forms for adjectives, so there is no reason not to say “emeritus professor” in reference to a woman in an English context.



                In Germany there has been a heated debate over whether a female professor should be styled “Professor” or “Professorin”. In lecture lists of German universities you now normally find just “Prof.” - one way to dodge the question.






                share|improve this answer












                We normally distinguish between nouns of “common gender”, which can be used either as masculine or as feminine depending on the sex of the person or animal in question, and “epicene nouns", which have a fixed gender, but can refer to creatures of either sex. If “professor” is treated as epicene, then one would have to say “professor emeritus” for a person of either sex, at least in (Neo-)Latin.



                In English there are no gendered forms for adjectives, so there is no reason not to say “emeritus professor” in reference to a woman in an English context.



                In Germany there has been a heated debate over whether a female professor should be styled “Professor” or “Professorin”. In lecture lists of German universities you now normally find just “Prof.” - one way to dodge the question.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 21 hours ago









                fdb

                10.3k11126




                10.3k11126






















                    Phill Schultz is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










                     

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