Why is “la Gestapo” feminine?¿Por qué es la palabra «mano» femenina?¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?Why La (feminine article) “KGB”?Determining gender of words ending in “e”Are there any nouns with irregular plurals in Spanish?Are there other “feminine only” adjectives in Spanish besides “embarazada”?What is the gender of adjectives that describe implied nouns?What is the significance of the gender of a noun in Spanish?Is “número” masculine or feminine?Shouldn't agua be profundo instead of profunda?Gender-Number Agreement with Feminine AdjectivesWhat percentage of nouns ending in -a are masculine and what percentage of nouns ending in -o are feminine?I see evidence that “las fieras” is more frequent than “los fieros.” If true, why?

Is camera lens focus an exact point or a range?

We have a love-hate relationship

Do Legal Documents Require Signing In Standard Pen Colors?

Varistor? Purpose and principle

anything or something to eat

Create all possible words using a set or letters

Is it possible to have a strip of cold climate in the middle of a planet?

MAXDOP Settings for SQL Server 2014

Should I stop contributing to retirement accounts?

Flux received by a negative charge

Is it improper etiquette to ask your opponent what his/her rating is before the game?

Pre-mixing cryogenic fuels and using only one fuel tank

Longest common substring in linear time

Is it better practice to read straight from sheet music rather than memorize it?

Why are synthetic pH indicators used over natural indicators?

Why did the EU agree to delay the Brexit deadline?

What should you do if you miss a job interview (deliberately)?

Biological Blimps: Propulsion

By means of an example, show that P(A) + P(B) = 1 does not mean that B is the complement of A.

How to set Output path correctly for a Single Image render?

Can I sign legal documents with a smiley face?

Why does Async/Await work properly when the loop is inside the async function and not the other way around?

Can the Supreme Court overturn an impeachment?

Is XSS in canonical link possible?



Why is “la Gestapo” feminine?


¿Por qué es la palabra «mano» femenina?¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?Why La (feminine article) “KGB”?Determining gender of words ending in “e”Are there any nouns with irregular plurals in Spanish?Are there other “feminine only” adjectives in Spanish besides “embarazada”?What is the gender of adjectives that describe implied nouns?What is the significance of the gender of a noun in Spanish?Is “número” masculine or feminine?Shouldn't agua be profundo instead of profunda?Gender-Number Agreement with Feminine AdjectivesWhat percentage of nouns ending in -a are masculine and what percentage of nouns ending in -o are feminine?I see evidence that “las fieras” is more frequent than “los fieros.” If true, why?













21















Why is the word Gestapo feminine? Almost all other (non-abbreviated) loanwords I can think of ending in -o have been absorbed as masculine. Is it because it is associated with policía?










share|improve this question

















  • 3





    Relacionado: ¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:21















21















Why is the word Gestapo feminine? Almost all other (non-abbreviated) loanwords I can think of ending in -o have been absorbed as masculine. Is it because it is associated with policía?










share|improve this question

















  • 3





    Relacionado: ¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:21













21












21








21








Why is the word Gestapo feminine? Almost all other (non-abbreviated) loanwords I can think of ending in -o have been absorbed as masculine. Is it because it is associated with policía?










share|improve this question














Why is the word Gestapo feminine? Almost all other (non-abbreviated) loanwords I can think of ending in -o have been absorbed as masculine. Is it because it is associated with policía?







etimología sustantivos género préstamo-lingüístico






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Mar 18 at 15:52









ukemiukemi

10.5k22359




10.5k22359







  • 3





    Relacionado: ¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:21












  • 3





    Relacionado: ¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:21







3




3





Relacionado: ¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?

– fedorqui
Mar 19 at 9:21





Relacionado: ¿Qué género tienen los extranjerismos?

– fedorqui
Mar 19 at 9:21










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















30














In all the Romance languages, gestapo is feminine despite its ending. It is most likely that whichever language first imported it (probably either French or Italian) figured that because gestapo stands in for Geheime Staatspolizei (policía estatal secreta), the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as with the analogous words la police (FR), la polizia (IT) especially considering that polizei is, coincidentally, also feminine in German. Spanish and others, in turn, maintained that usage, although it's possible for separately and independently maintaining the feminine nature of policía/polizei.



Also, even though it ends in -o which normally pushes words to be masculine, I find that acronyms and abbreviations for organizations tend to maintain the connection to the base noun's gender moreso than more common nouns.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 18 at 21:11






  • 3





    @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

    – ukemi
    Mar 19 at 9:40






  • 1





    @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

    – ukemi
    Mar 19 at 10:23






  • 1





    @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

    – guifa
    Mar 19 at 16:50






  • 3





    "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

    – Maksim
    Mar 19 at 17:20



















11















Is it because it is associated with policía?




The answer is yes according to the DPD (Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas):




sigla.

1. Se llama sigla tanto a la palabra formada por las iniciales
de los términos que integran una denominación compleja, como a cada
una de esas letras iniciales. Las siglas se utilizan para referirse de
forma abreviada a organismos, instituciones, empresas, objetos,
sistemas, asociaciones, etc.

...


4. Género. Las siglas adoptan el género de la palabra que constituye el núcleo de la expresión abreviada, que normalmente ocupa el primer
lugar en la denominación: el FMI, por el «Fondo» Monetario
Internacional; la OEA, por la «Organización» de Estados Americanos; la
Unesco, por la United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
«Organization» (‘Organización de Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la
Ciencia y la Cultura’)




Let me try to translate the quoted text:




1.We apply the name sigla both to the word formed by the initials of the terms that combine in a complex denomination and to each of the
initial letters. Siglas are used to refer in an abbreviated form to
organizations, institutions, companies, objects, systems, associations, etc

...


4.Gender. Siglas adopt the gender of the word that represents the nucleus of the abbreviated expression, that which usually occupies the first place in the term: el FMI (Fondo Monetario Internacional; la OEA (Organización de Estados Americanos), la UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), ...




So, it seems that Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei) follows this rule, being its nucleus polizei.



Thinking about this question, I've realized that there is a rare exception to this rule: KGB (in Spanish: Comité para la Seguridad del Estado). I've read both el KGB and la KGB. We can use el taking Comité as its nucleus but we also may use la because KGB is a secret police agency, like their counterpart la CIA. KGB was an agency and a sort of police like the Gestapo so we use la as determiner as well.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:20






  • 1





    @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:21







  • 1





    Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:33






  • 1





    No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:36







  • 1





    @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:53


















2














The term "Gestapo" is a contraction of "Geheime Staatspolizei", and the last word "Polizei", which is feminine in German, determines the grammatical gender.



Cf also the very beginning of the Spanish Wikipedia entry for Gestapo:




La Gestapo (contracción de Geheime Staatspolizei: 'Policía Secreta del Estado') fue la policía secreta oficial de la Alemania nazi (...)




Until the year 1936 the term "Gestapa" was also in use, a contraction of "Geheimes Staatspolizeiamt", the last word being neuter in German.






share|improve this answer










New contributor




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



























    0














    The answer for this is simple - but you may not understand it fully if your native language has no specified gender for every word, such as it is in portuguese. The simple reason is that "La Gestapo" refers to "La Policia Gestapo", and "Policia" (police) is a feminine word.



    There's really no specific rule for which words are masculine and which are feminine and that's why this issue may confuse those whose native language hasn't got this aspect.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




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















    • 3





      As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

      – Peter Wone
      Mar 18 at 23:59






    • 1





      But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

      – mdewey
      Mar 19 at 14:53











    • @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

      – Stormbolter
      Mar 20 at 10:44










    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "353"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fspanish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f28893%2fwhy-is-la-gestapo-feminine%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    30














    In all the Romance languages, gestapo is feminine despite its ending. It is most likely that whichever language first imported it (probably either French or Italian) figured that because gestapo stands in for Geheime Staatspolizei (policía estatal secreta), the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as with the analogous words la police (FR), la polizia (IT) especially considering that polizei is, coincidentally, also feminine in German. Spanish and others, in turn, maintained that usage, although it's possible for separately and independently maintaining the feminine nature of policía/polizei.



    Also, even though it ends in -o which normally pushes words to be masculine, I find that acronyms and abbreviations for organizations tend to maintain the connection to the base noun's gender moreso than more common nouns.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

      – BruceWayne
      Mar 18 at 21:11






    • 3





      @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 9:40






    • 1





      @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 10:23






    • 1





      @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

      – guifa
      Mar 19 at 16:50






    • 3





      "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

      – Maksim
      Mar 19 at 17:20
















    30














    In all the Romance languages, gestapo is feminine despite its ending. It is most likely that whichever language first imported it (probably either French or Italian) figured that because gestapo stands in for Geheime Staatspolizei (policía estatal secreta), the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as with the analogous words la police (FR), la polizia (IT) especially considering that polizei is, coincidentally, also feminine in German. Spanish and others, in turn, maintained that usage, although it's possible for separately and independently maintaining the feminine nature of policía/polizei.



    Also, even though it ends in -o which normally pushes words to be masculine, I find that acronyms and abbreviations for organizations tend to maintain the connection to the base noun's gender moreso than more common nouns.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

      – BruceWayne
      Mar 18 at 21:11






    • 3





      @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 9:40






    • 1





      @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 10:23






    • 1





      @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

      – guifa
      Mar 19 at 16:50






    • 3





      "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

      – Maksim
      Mar 19 at 17:20














    30












    30








    30







    In all the Romance languages, gestapo is feminine despite its ending. It is most likely that whichever language first imported it (probably either French or Italian) figured that because gestapo stands in for Geheime Staatspolizei (policía estatal secreta), the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as with the analogous words la police (FR), la polizia (IT) especially considering that polizei is, coincidentally, also feminine in German. Spanish and others, in turn, maintained that usage, although it's possible for separately and independently maintaining the feminine nature of policía/polizei.



    Also, even though it ends in -o which normally pushes words to be masculine, I find that acronyms and abbreviations for organizations tend to maintain the connection to the base noun's gender moreso than more common nouns.






    share|improve this answer















    In all the Romance languages, gestapo is feminine despite its ending. It is most likely that whichever language first imported it (probably either French or Italian) figured that because gestapo stands in for Geheime Staatspolizei (policía estatal secreta), the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as with the analogous words la police (FR), la polizia (IT) especially considering that polizei is, coincidentally, also feminine in German. Spanish and others, in turn, maintained that usage, although it's possible for separately and independently maintaining the feminine nature of policía/polizei.



    Also, even though it ends in -o which normally pushes words to be masculine, I find that acronyms and abbreviations for organizations tend to maintain the connection to the base noun's gender moreso than more common nouns.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Mar 19 at 8:26

























    answered Mar 18 at 16:52









    guifaguifa

    26.2k13173




    26.2k13173







    • 1





      "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

      – BruceWayne
      Mar 18 at 21:11






    • 3





      @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 9:40






    • 1





      @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 10:23






    • 1





      @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

      – guifa
      Mar 19 at 16:50






    • 3





      "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

      – Maksim
      Mar 19 at 17:20













    • 1





      "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

      – BruceWayne
      Mar 18 at 21:11






    • 3





      @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 9:40






    • 1





      @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

      – ukemi
      Mar 19 at 10:23






    • 1





      @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

      – guifa
      Mar 19 at 16:50






    • 3





      "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

      – Maksim
      Mar 19 at 17:20








    1




    1





    "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 18 at 21:11





    "...the appropriate use would be to make it feminine as it also is in German." - Do you mean that when borrowing the word from German, the language actually considers the article in the original language? (As opposed to say, borrowed words always/mostly being feminine)?

    – BruceWayne
    Mar 18 at 21:11




    3




    3





    @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

    – ukemi
    Mar 19 at 9:40





    @T.J.Crowder sistema isn't a loanword to Italian - it was inherited from Latin systēma, itself from Ancient Greek σύστημα (sústēma).

    – ukemi
    Mar 19 at 9:40




    1




    1





    @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

    – ukemi
    Mar 19 at 10:23





    @T.J.Crowder This Italian SE post might be of interest to you: italian.stackexchange.com/questions/8517/…

    – ukemi
    Mar 19 at 10:23




    1




    1





    @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

    – guifa
    Mar 19 at 16:50





    @Phoog absolutely, it's counnidental in the sense that the German gender of the word likely had little to no influence on the gender chosen upon reimportation within Gestapo

    – guifa
    Mar 19 at 16:50




    3




    3





    "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

    – Maksim
    Mar 19 at 17:20






    "Stasi" = "Staatssicherheit" in German and as the last part of compound nouns in german determines the gender ("die Sicherheit") it s female in german. Not sure which gender it has in Espanol.

    – Maksim
    Mar 19 at 17:20












    11















    Is it because it is associated with policía?




    The answer is yes according to the DPD (Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas):




    sigla.

    1. Se llama sigla tanto a la palabra formada por las iniciales
    de los términos que integran una denominación compleja, como a cada
    una de esas letras iniciales. Las siglas se utilizan para referirse de
    forma abreviada a organismos, instituciones, empresas, objetos,
    sistemas, asociaciones, etc.

    ...


    4. Género. Las siglas adoptan el género de la palabra que constituye el núcleo de la expresión abreviada, que normalmente ocupa el primer
    lugar en la denominación: el FMI, por el «Fondo» Monetario
    Internacional; la OEA, por la «Organización» de Estados Americanos; la
    Unesco, por la United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
    «Organization» (‘Organización de Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la
    Ciencia y la Cultura’)




    Let me try to translate the quoted text:




    1.We apply the name sigla both to the word formed by the initials of the terms that combine in a complex denomination and to each of the
    initial letters. Siglas are used to refer in an abbreviated form to
    organizations, institutions, companies, objects, systems, associations, etc

    ...


    4.Gender. Siglas adopt the gender of the word that represents the nucleus of the abbreviated expression, that which usually occupies the first place in the term: el FMI (Fondo Monetario Internacional; la OEA (Organización de Estados Americanos), la UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), ...




    So, it seems that Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei) follows this rule, being its nucleus polizei.



    Thinking about this question, I've realized that there is a rare exception to this rule: KGB (in Spanish: Comité para la Seguridad del Estado). I've read both el KGB and la KGB. We can use el taking Comité as its nucleus but we also may use la because KGB is a secret police agency, like their counterpart la CIA. KGB was an agency and a sort of police like the Gestapo so we use la as determiner as well.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:20






    • 1





      @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:21







    • 1





      Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:33






    • 1





      No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:36







    • 1





      @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:53















    11















    Is it because it is associated with policía?




    The answer is yes according to the DPD (Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas):




    sigla.

    1. Se llama sigla tanto a la palabra formada por las iniciales
    de los términos que integran una denominación compleja, como a cada
    una de esas letras iniciales. Las siglas se utilizan para referirse de
    forma abreviada a organismos, instituciones, empresas, objetos,
    sistemas, asociaciones, etc.

    ...


    4. Género. Las siglas adoptan el género de la palabra que constituye el núcleo de la expresión abreviada, que normalmente ocupa el primer
    lugar en la denominación: el FMI, por el «Fondo» Monetario
    Internacional; la OEA, por la «Organización» de Estados Americanos; la
    Unesco, por la United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
    «Organization» (‘Organización de Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la
    Ciencia y la Cultura’)




    Let me try to translate the quoted text:




    1.We apply the name sigla both to the word formed by the initials of the terms that combine in a complex denomination and to each of the
    initial letters. Siglas are used to refer in an abbreviated form to
    organizations, institutions, companies, objects, systems, associations, etc

    ...


    4.Gender. Siglas adopt the gender of the word that represents the nucleus of the abbreviated expression, that which usually occupies the first place in the term: el FMI (Fondo Monetario Internacional; la OEA (Organización de Estados Americanos), la UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), ...




    So, it seems that Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei) follows this rule, being its nucleus polizei.



    Thinking about this question, I've realized that there is a rare exception to this rule: KGB (in Spanish: Comité para la Seguridad del Estado). I've read both el KGB and la KGB. We can use el taking Comité as its nucleus but we also may use la because KGB is a secret police agency, like their counterpart la CIA. KGB was an agency and a sort of police like the Gestapo so we use la as determiner as well.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:20






    • 1





      @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:21







    • 1





      Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:33






    • 1





      No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:36







    • 1





      @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:53













    11












    11








    11








    Is it because it is associated with policía?




    The answer is yes according to the DPD (Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas):




    sigla.

    1. Se llama sigla tanto a la palabra formada por las iniciales
    de los términos que integran una denominación compleja, como a cada
    una de esas letras iniciales. Las siglas se utilizan para referirse de
    forma abreviada a organismos, instituciones, empresas, objetos,
    sistemas, asociaciones, etc.

    ...


    4. Género. Las siglas adoptan el género de la palabra que constituye el núcleo de la expresión abreviada, que normalmente ocupa el primer
    lugar en la denominación: el FMI, por el «Fondo» Monetario
    Internacional; la OEA, por la «Organización» de Estados Americanos; la
    Unesco, por la United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
    «Organization» (‘Organización de Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la
    Ciencia y la Cultura’)




    Let me try to translate the quoted text:




    1.We apply the name sigla both to the word formed by the initials of the terms that combine in a complex denomination and to each of the
    initial letters. Siglas are used to refer in an abbreviated form to
    organizations, institutions, companies, objects, systems, associations, etc

    ...


    4.Gender. Siglas adopt the gender of the word that represents the nucleus of the abbreviated expression, that which usually occupies the first place in the term: el FMI (Fondo Monetario Internacional; la OEA (Organización de Estados Americanos), la UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), ...




    So, it seems that Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei) follows this rule, being its nucleus polizei.



    Thinking about this question, I've realized that there is a rare exception to this rule: KGB (in Spanish: Comité para la Seguridad del Estado). I've read both el KGB and la KGB. We can use el taking Comité as its nucleus but we also may use la because KGB is a secret police agency, like their counterpart la CIA. KGB was an agency and a sort of police like the Gestapo so we use la as determiner as well.






    share|improve this answer
















    Is it because it is associated with policía?




    The answer is yes according to the DPD (Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas):




    sigla.

    1. Se llama sigla tanto a la palabra formada por las iniciales
    de los términos que integran una denominación compleja, como a cada
    una de esas letras iniciales. Las siglas se utilizan para referirse de
    forma abreviada a organismos, instituciones, empresas, objetos,
    sistemas, asociaciones, etc.

    ...


    4. Género. Las siglas adoptan el género de la palabra que constituye el núcleo de la expresión abreviada, que normalmente ocupa el primer
    lugar en la denominación: el FMI, por el «Fondo» Monetario
    Internacional; la OEA, por la «Organización» de Estados Americanos; la
    Unesco, por la United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
    «Organization» (‘Organización de Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la
    Ciencia y la Cultura’)




    Let me try to translate the quoted text:




    1.We apply the name sigla both to the word formed by the initials of the terms that combine in a complex denomination and to each of the
    initial letters. Siglas are used to refer in an abbreviated form to
    organizations, institutions, companies, objects, systems, associations, etc

    ...


    4.Gender. Siglas adopt the gender of the word that represents the nucleus of the abbreviated expression, that which usually occupies the first place in the term: el FMI (Fondo Monetario Internacional; la OEA (Organización de Estados Americanos), la UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), ...




    So, it seems that Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei) follows this rule, being its nucleus polizei.



    Thinking about this question, I've realized that there is a rare exception to this rule: KGB (in Spanish: Comité para la Seguridad del Estado). I've read both el KGB and la KGB. We can use el taking Comité as its nucleus but we also may use la because KGB is a secret police agency, like their counterpart la CIA. KGB was an agency and a sort of police like the Gestapo so we use la as determiner as well.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Mar 19 at 11:53

























    answered Mar 19 at 7:35









    RubioRicRubioRic

    1,883220




    1,883220







    • 1





      mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:20






    • 1





      @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:21







    • 1





      Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:33






    • 1





      No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:36







    • 1





      @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:53












    • 1





      mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:20






    • 1





      @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:21







    • 1





      Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

      – fedorqui
      Mar 19 at 9:33






    • 1





      No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:36







    • 1





      @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

      – RubioRic
      Mar 19 at 9:53







    1




    1





    mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:20





    mmm no sé hasta qué punto la entrada del DPD aplica aquí, pues estamos hablando de una palabra extranjera.

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:20




    1




    1





    @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:21






    @fedorqui Si lees atentamente, en la propia entrada del DPD se menciona UNESCO (ver arriba), cuyas siglas no han sido traducidas al español y se usa tal cual. El mismo caso que en gestapo.

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:21





    1




    1





    Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:33





    Sí, lo vi, pero no sé hasta qué punto está cogiendo organización del castellano, pues en inglés no hay género. Me parece algo forzado, vaya, que se vaya a la sigla original, se coja el núcleo, se mire el género y se aplique al castellano. Si fuera el caso, entonces habría que destacar que polizei en alemán es femenina. Por lo que veo en wordreference.com/ende/police sí es.

    – fedorqui
    Mar 19 at 9:33




    1




    1





    No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:36






    No entiendo esa parte de que se vaya a la palabra del idioma original a buscar el género, que es lo que parece que apunta guifa en su respuesta. Yo creo que se refiere al género de la palabla nuclear en español. Policía en español es femenino independientemente de lo que sea en alemán. CIA no tiene género en inglés, en español le ponemos la porque es una Agencia que es femenino en español.

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:36





    1




    1





    @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:53





    @fedorqui Buró existe en castellano y es masculino, el Buró Federal de Investigación

    – RubioRic
    Mar 19 at 9:53











    2














    The term "Gestapo" is a contraction of "Geheime Staatspolizei", and the last word "Polizei", which is feminine in German, determines the grammatical gender.



    Cf also the very beginning of the Spanish Wikipedia entry for Gestapo:




    La Gestapo (contracción de Geheime Staatspolizei: 'Policía Secreta del Estado') fue la policía secreta oficial de la Alemania nazi (...)




    Until the year 1936 the term "Gestapa" was also in use, a contraction of "Geheimes Staatspolizeiamt", the last word being neuter in German.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




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
























      2














      The term "Gestapo" is a contraction of "Geheime Staatspolizei", and the last word "Polizei", which is feminine in German, determines the grammatical gender.



      Cf also the very beginning of the Spanish Wikipedia entry for Gestapo:




      La Gestapo (contracción de Geheime Staatspolizei: 'Policía Secreta del Estado') fue la policía secreta oficial de la Alemania nazi (...)




      Until the year 1936 the term "Gestapa" was also in use, a contraction of "Geheimes Staatspolizeiamt", the last word being neuter in German.






      share|improve this answer










      New contributor




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






















        2












        2








        2







        The term "Gestapo" is a contraction of "Geheime Staatspolizei", and the last word "Polizei", which is feminine in German, determines the grammatical gender.



        Cf also the very beginning of the Spanish Wikipedia entry for Gestapo:




        La Gestapo (contracción de Geheime Staatspolizei: 'Policía Secreta del Estado') fue la policía secreta oficial de la Alemania nazi (...)




        Until the year 1936 the term "Gestapa" was also in use, a contraction of "Geheimes Staatspolizeiamt", the last word being neuter in German.






        share|improve this answer










        New contributor




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










        The term "Gestapo" is a contraction of "Geheime Staatspolizei", and the last word "Polizei", which is feminine in German, determines the grammatical gender.



        Cf also the very beginning of the Spanish Wikipedia entry for Gestapo:




        La Gestapo (contracción de Geheime Staatspolizei: 'Policía Secreta del Estado') fue la policía secreta oficial de la Alemania nazi (...)




        Until the year 1936 the term "Gestapa" was also in use, a contraction of "Geheimes Staatspolizeiamt", the last word being neuter in German.







        share|improve this answer










        New contributor




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









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Mar 20 at 11:49









        ukemi

        10.5k22359




        10.5k22359






        New contributor




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









        answered Mar 19 at 13:26









        HannoHanno

        1213




        1213




        New contributor




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





        New contributor





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






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





















            0














            The answer for this is simple - but you may not understand it fully if your native language has no specified gender for every word, such as it is in portuguese. The simple reason is that "La Gestapo" refers to "La Policia Gestapo", and "Policia" (police) is a feminine word.



            There's really no specific rule for which words are masculine and which are feminine and that's why this issue may confuse those whose native language hasn't got this aspect.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




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















            • 3





              As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

              – Peter Wone
              Mar 18 at 23:59






            • 1





              But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

              – mdewey
              Mar 19 at 14:53











            • @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

              – Stormbolter
              Mar 20 at 10:44















            0














            The answer for this is simple - but you may not understand it fully if your native language has no specified gender for every word, such as it is in portuguese. The simple reason is that "La Gestapo" refers to "La Policia Gestapo", and "Policia" (police) is a feminine word.



            There's really no specific rule for which words are masculine and which are feminine and that's why this issue may confuse those whose native language hasn't got this aspect.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




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















            • 3





              As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

              – Peter Wone
              Mar 18 at 23:59






            • 1





              But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

              – mdewey
              Mar 19 at 14:53











            • @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

              – Stormbolter
              Mar 20 at 10:44













            0












            0








            0







            The answer for this is simple - but you may not understand it fully if your native language has no specified gender for every word, such as it is in portuguese. The simple reason is that "La Gestapo" refers to "La Policia Gestapo", and "Policia" (police) is a feminine word.



            There's really no specific rule for which words are masculine and which are feminine and that's why this issue may confuse those whose native language hasn't got this aspect.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




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










            The answer for this is simple - but you may not understand it fully if your native language has no specified gender for every word, such as it is in portuguese. The simple reason is that "La Gestapo" refers to "La Policia Gestapo", and "Policia" (police) is a feminine word.



            There's really no specific rule for which words are masculine and which are feminine and that's why this issue may confuse those whose native language hasn't got this aspect.







            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




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









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Mar 20 at 11:48









            ukemi

            10.5k22359




            10.5k22359






            New contributor




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









            answered Mar 18 at 21:43









            Guto LimaGuto Lima

            91




            91




            New contributor




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





            New contributor





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






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







            • 3





              As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

              – Peter Wone
              Mar 18 at 23:59






            • 1





              But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

              – mdewey
              Mar 19 at 14:53











            • @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

              – Stormbolter
              Mar 20 at 10:44












            • 3





              As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

              – Peter Wone
              Mar 18 at 23:59






            • 1





              But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

              – mdewey
              Mar 19 at 14:53











            • @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

              – Stormbolter
              Mar 20 at 10:44







            3




            3





            As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

            – Peter Wone
            Mar 18 at 23:59





            As detailed in another answer, gestapo is a contraction of Geheime Staatspolizei which is German. "-po" means police, so "La Policia Gestapo" means "the police secret state police". Maybe this is Spanish idiom, probably adopted because the "wrong" word ending sounded awful to Spanish speakers, but I am curious as to why you didn't just change the word ending: "gestapa".

            – Peter Wone
            Mar 18 at 23:59




            1




            1





            But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

            – mdewey
            Mar 19 at 14:53





            But as another answer suggests there is a clear rule in Spanish for assigning the gender of abbreviations.

            – mdewey
            Mar 19 at 14:53













            @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

            – Stormbolter
            Mar 20 at 10:44





            @PeterWone: It is a bit when we say the Sahara Desert, even though "Sahara" means "desert" ("el desierto del Sahara" it's still a common phrase in Spanish).

            – Stormbolter
            Mar 20 at 10:44

















            draft saved

            draft discarded
















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Spanish Language Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fspanish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f28893%2fwhy-is-la-gestapo-feminine%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Bruad Bilen | Luke uk diar | NawigatsjuunCommonskategorii: BruadCommonskategorii: RunstükenWikiquote: Bruad

            What is the offset in a seaplane's hull?

            Slayer Innehåll Historia | Stil, komposition och lyrik | Bandets betydelse och framgångar | Sidoprojekt och samarbeten | Kontroverser | Medlemmar | Utmärkelser och nomineringar | Turnéer och festivaler | Diskografi | Referenser | Externa länkar | Navigeringsmenywww.slayer.net”Metal Massacre vol. 1””Metal Massacre vol. 3””Metal Massacre Volume III””Show No Mercy””Haunting the Chapel””Live Undead””Hell Awaits””Reign in Blood””Reign in Blood””Gold & Platinum – Reign in Blood””Golden Gods Awards Winners”originalet”Kerrang! Hall Of Fame””Slayer Looks Back On 37-Year Career In New Video Series: Part Two””South of Heaven””Gold & Platinum – South of Heaven””Seasons in the Abyss””Gold & Platinum - Seasons in the Abyss””Divine Intervention””Divine Intervention - Release group by Slayer””Gold & Platinum - Divine Intervention””Live Intrusion””Undisputed Attitude””Abolish Government/Superficial Love””Release “Slatanic Slaughter: A Tribute to Slayer” by Various Artists””Diabolus in Musica””Soundtrack to the Apocalypse””God Hates Us All””Systematic - Relationships””War at the Warfield””Gold & Platinum - War at the Warfield””Soundtrack to the Apocalypse””Gold & Platinum - Still Reigning””Metallica, Slayer, Iron Mauden Among Winners At Metal Hammer Awards””Eternal Pyre””Eternal Pyre - Slayer release group””Eternal Pyre””Metal Storm Awards 2006””Kerrang! Hall Of Fame””Slayer Wins 'Best Metal' Grammy Award””Slayer Guitarist Jeff Hanneman Dies””Bullet-For My Valentine booed at Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards””Unholy Aliance””The End Of Slayer?””Slayer: We Could Thrash Out Two More Albums If We're Fast Enough...””'The Unholy Alliance: Chapter III' UK Dates Added”originalet”Megadeth And Slayer To Co-Headline 'Canadian Carnage' Trek”originalet”World Painted Blood””Release “World Painted Blood” by Slayer””Metallica Heading To Cinemas””Slayer, Megadeth To Join Forces For 'European Carnage' Tour - Dec. 18, 2010”originalet”Slayer's Hanneman Contracts Acute Infection; Band To Bring In Guest Guitarist””Cannibal Corpse's Pat O'Brien Will Step In As Slayer's Guest Guitarist”originalet”Slayer’s Jeff Hanneman Dead at 49””Dave Lombardo Says He Made Only $67,000 In 2011 While Touring With Slayer””Slayer: We Do Not Agree With Dave Lombardo's Substance Or Timeline Of Events””Slayer Welcomes Drummer Paul Bostaph Back To The Fold””Slayer Hope to Unveil Never-Before-Heard Jeff Hanneman Material on Next Album””Slayer Debut New Song 'Implode' During Surprise Golden Gods Appearance””Release group Repentless by Slayer””Repentless - Slayer - Credits””Slayer””Metal Storm Awards 2015””Slayer - to release comic book "Repentless #1"””Slayer To Release 'Repentless' 6.66" Vinyl Box Set””BREAKING NEWS: Slayer Announce Farewell Tour””Slayer Recruit Lamb of God, Anthrax, Behemoth + Testament for Final Tour””Slayer lägger ner efter 37 år””Slayer Announces Second North American Leg Of 'Final' Tour””Final World Tour””Slayer Announces Final European Tour With Lamb of God, Anthrax And Obituary””Slayer To Tour Europe With Lamb of God, Anthrax And Obituary””Slayer To Play 'Last French Show Ever' At Next Year's Hellfst””Slayer's Final World Tour Will Extend Into 2019””Death Angel's Rob Cavestany On Slayer's 'Farewell' Tour: 'Some Of Us Could See This Coming'””Testament Has No Plans To Retire Anytime Soon, Says Chuck Billy””Anthrax's Scott Ian On Slayer's 'Farewell' Tour Plans: 'I Was Surprised And I Wasn't Surprised'””Slayer””Slayer's Morbid Schlock””Review/Rock; For Slayer, the Mania Is the Message””Slayer - Biography””Slayer - Reign In Blood”originalet”Dave Lombardo””An exclusive oral history of Slayer”originalet”Exclusive! Interview With Slayer Guitarist Jeff Hanneman”originalet”Thinking Out Loud: Slayer's Kerry King on hair metal, Satan and being polite””Slayer Lyrics””Slayer - Biography””Most influential artists for extreme metal music””Slayer - Reign in Blood””Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman dies aged 49””Slatanic Slaughter: A Tribute to Slayer””Gateway to Hell: A Tribute to Slayer””Covered In Blood””Slayer: The Origins of Thrash in San Francisco, CA.””Why They Rule - #6 Slayer”originalet”Guitar World's 100 Greatest Heavy Metal Guitarists Of All Time”originalet”The fans have spoken: Slayer comes out on top in readers' polls”originalet”Tribute to Jeff Hanneman (1964-2013)””Lamb Of God Frontman: We Sound Like A Slayer Rip-Off””BEHEMOTH Frontman Pays Tribute To SLAYER's JEFF HANNEMAN””Slayer, Hatebreed Doing Double Duty On This Year's Ozzfest””System of a Down””Lacuna Coil’s Andrea Ferro Talks Influences, Skateboarding, Band Origins + More””Slayer - Reign in Blood””Into The Lungs of Hell””Slayer rules - en utställning om fans””Slayer and Their Fans Slashed Through a No-Holds-Barred Night at Gas Monkey””Home””Slayer””Gold & Platinum - The Big 4 Live from Sofia, Bulgaria””Exclusive! Interview With Slayer Guitarist Kerry King””2008-02-23: Wiltern, Los Angeles, CA, USA””Slayer's Kerry King To Perform With Megadeth Tonight! - Oct. 21, 2010”originalet”Dave Lombardo - Biography”Slayer Case DismissedArkiveradUltimate Classic Rock: Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman dead at 49.”Slayer: "We could never do any thing like Some Kind Of Monster..."””Cannibal Corpse'S Pat O'Brien Will Step In As Slayer'S Guest Guitarist | The Official Slayer Site”originalet”Slayer Wins 'Best Metal' Grammy Award””Slayer Guitarist Jeff Hanneman Dies””Kerrang! Awards 2006 Blog: Kerrang! Hall Of Fame””Kerrang! Awards 2013: Kerrang! Legend”originalet”Metallica, Slayer, Iron Maien Among Winners At Metal Hammer Awards””Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards””Bullet For My Valentine Booed At Metal Hammer Golden Gods Awards””Metal Storm Awards 2006””Metal Storm Awards 2015””Slayer's Concert History””Slayer - Relationships””Slayer - Releases”Slayers officiella webbplatsSlayer på MusicBrainzOfficiell webbplatsSlayerSlayerr1373445760000 0001 1540 47353068615-5086262726cb13906545x(data)6033143kn20030215029