לגבר יש שני משמעויות, האחד זה המגדר והשני זה מאפייני הגבריות
בלא מעט מהמקרים אנשים שמשתמשים בכינוי גבר מתייחסים לשניהם, אבל אם רוצים לשים דגש חזק יותר על האלמנטיים הגבריים של גבר ספציפי, יש גם כינויים כגון גבר גבר, גבר גברי וגבר אמיתי, שלושתם הם פחות או יותר בעלי אותה משמעות. בכל מקרה אני מעדיף שיפנו עליי עם הניסוח של "גבר יש לך סיגריה?" מאשר "אחי יש לך סיגריה?", זה שאני גבר זה נכון, זה שאני "אח" שלו זה הרבה פחות נכון, לא ברמה המשפחתית, ואפילו לא ברמה של אחוות גברים, במקרה שמדובר בגבר זר שאין לי הרבה קשר או/ו סימפטיה עליו, כמובן שאני לא רואה כל גבר "כאחי".
"The Trope Namer and prime example of this sort of behavior is a hypothetical scenario (first told by British philosopher Antony Flew in his 1975 book Thinking About Thinking) in which a Scotsman reads about a horrible crime in the newspaper that takes place in the English town of Brighton and smugly thinks to himself, "No Scotsman would ever do such a thing." Something much worse happens in nearby Aberdeen and is reported on the next day. Rather than admit that he's wrong, he instead thinks, "No true Scotsman would ever do such a thing." In this case, he is going from "someone who lives in Scotland" to "someone that meets my standard of Scottish behavior.""
[URL]http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/NoTrueScotsman[/URL]
"A work that is heavily dependent on things, situations, or actions that are stereotypically masculine, in order to appeal to a predominantly male audience. Made by men, for men."
"Traditionally, the role of women in such works is often stereotypically feminine, as support characters or Love Interests, sometimes satellite ones, while the men fight and die (often for their sake). A woman may be the Unwitting Instigator of Doom, doing some small and unimportant action early in the movie or in the origin story, which start the chain of events that lead to some great disaster For Want of a Nail, and the real men would have to deal with it (for example, the villain may have turned into a villain in the first place because Love Makes You Crazy). Nevertheless, badass females are far from uncommon, and they may or may not be masculine in their interests. Either way, expect Fanservice. Though keep in mind actual sex or womanizing doesn't necessarily mean "manly", as most playboys tend to have physical (and personality) traits opposite to the ones described above."
"Just because a work falls under this trope doesn't mean that it can't have any feminine appeal or a significantly large female audience. You'll find that many of the examples below have almost as many female fans as they do male fans. This trope simply means that stereotypical masculine behavior is a significant focus of the work at hand. The number of female fans generally depends on how rigidly and/or multi-dimensionally the work fits this trope."
[URL]http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RatedMForManly[/URL]