In technical terms gender in languages is just one way of breaking up nouns into classes or categories.
Masculine names in different languages. A noun is a part of language that names a person place thing idea action or quality. Un Américain but un type américain. Dk dark lt light m- medium lv living things mm man-made things m masculine f feminine n neuter c common gender pl plural.
In Arabic you can also call your partner my life. Like Mike or Amrita. From the Hebrew name אהרן Aharon which is most likely of unknown Egyptian origin.
Evidently the male name Brandr took root in areas of the British Isles under Nordic dominance and through being heard as Brenda was eventually adopted as a female name. It originated from Ireland. Languages such as Finnish Hungarian Estonian Turkish Indonesian and Vietnamese to name just a few do not have grammatical genders at all.
That is all nouns are either masculine or feminine. For example nouns can refer to an individual name of a person. Only one-forth of the worlds languages have a system of noun classification.
يا حياتي ya hayati - my life. Any language Albanian Ancient Greek Ancient Roman Arabic Armenian Basque Belarusian Bosnian Breton Bulgarian Catalan Cornish Corsican Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Esperanto Estonian Finnish French Frisian Galician Georgian German Greek Hawaiian Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indian Irish Italian Latvian Lithuanian. Other logical genders like this can be found in Tamil where three genders exist.
For example if you are German and your wife is Klingon it can tell you that the only name option is Arne. Saying manly in African Languages. When linking grammatically masculine role names to female referents is difficult.