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I had "The New First Aid in English" by Angus Maciver at school. The one I have in front of me is dated 1978 (long after I left school). It has a list of 78 words that indicate the male sex with 78 corresponding words that indicate the female sex. These include conductor and conductress, host and hostess, earl and countess, nephew and niece, poet and poetess, king and queen, proprietor and proprietrix. We could substitute 'monarch' for king and queen, but do we need to lose the feminine forms of so many words? And why lose the feminine form every time? If we can say "She is an actor" why could we not say "He is a princess"? How about coster and donah, sloven and slut? In the animal section he gives hound and brach, hold and jill (ferrets).