The frequency of word gender as a variable for lexical access in Spanish
Fecha
2022Resumen
The endings of Spanish nouns reflect gender with varying degrees of
frequency and regularity. The most common and regular endings are -o for
masculine nouns and -a for feminine nouns, -o being more frequent and less
closely associated with a specific gender category (masculine) than -a. Pairs of
words occurring with both gender categories differ in the frequencies with which
they are used as masculine or feminine forms: médic-o/médic-a ‘doctor’ (m.)/
‘doctor’ (f.) is a clear example of a masculine-dominant pair, whereas enfermer-o/
enfermer-a ‘nurse’ (m.)/ ‘nurse’ (f.) is a feminine-dominant pair. Adult readers of
Spanish are faster in recognizing feminine forms of feminine-dominant pairs, and
masculine forms of masculine-dominant pairs (Dominguez, Alberto, Fernando
Cuetos & Juan Segui. 1999. The processing of grammatical gender and number in
Spanish. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 28(5). 485–498). This study aims to
test the dominant frequency effect in third and sixth grade children, as well as in
adults. Children were faster in recognizing masculine forms in masculinedominant pairs, but not feminine forms in feminine-dominant pairs. Adults, by
contrast, tended to respond faster to higher frequency words, irrespective of
gender, indicating that they have independent representations for both genders.
The dominance of masculine forms in children could be a consequence of the
statistical distribution of gender dominance and regularity in Spanish. The experience of skilled adult readers seems to make them less dependent on this
statistical pattern