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marbeit15

'Stopit!' She Said. 'Nomore!' - 0 views

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    GENIE An Abused Child's Flight From Silence. By Russ Rymer. 221 pp. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. THE story of the girl known by the pseudonym Genie, who spent the first 13 years of her life locked in a bedroom alone, alternately strapped down to a child's potty chair or straitjacketed into a sleeping bag, fed on baby food and beaten with a wooden paddle when she so much as whimpered, is really three stories woven together.
haleycrabtree17

Fact or Fiction? The Top 10 Assumptions about Early Speech and Language Development - 0 views

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    By Lauren Lowry Hanen Certified Speech-Language Pathologist and Hanen Staff Member Do you ever wonder if boys really do talk later than girls? Or if it's confusing to speak two languages to a child? And when grandma says using a pacifier is going to cause speech problems later, should you believe her?
leiadeer2017

William Safire - On Language - Woman vs. Female - 0 views

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    This article discusses the use and comparison of the two words "women" and "female." It takes a political, social, and economical aspect to show very interesting examples of how the two words differ. "Both words can function as nouns, but female, unlike woman, can also be an adjective. In an Oscar Hammerstein II lyric from "Flower Drum Song," written 50 years ago, a young woman glad to be a girl sings, "I'm strictly a female female" - the first use an adjective; the second, a noun. Adjectives are by their nature stretchable, happily taking "more" or "less": you can say "more female," but you cannot say "more woman"; you would have to say "more womanly." In modifying another noun, woman is what the O.E.D. labels an apposite noun - explaining, even identifying, the noun it "stands next to" - but syntactically stronger than an adjective. Both words can be used as modifiers of nouns, but the noun woman has more weight."
Lara Cowell

Jeffrey Epstein and the Myth of the 'Underage Woman' - The Atlantic - 1 views

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    The article, which is about serial sexual predator and businessman, the late Jeffrey Epstein, also explores the media's use of the term "underage woman" and the socially-sanctioned sexism behind the term: a way to lessen the seriousness of pedophilia and abuse.
casskawashima23

Seeing at the Speed of Sound | STANFORD magazine - 0 views

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    This is an article about the experiences, inner thoughts, and struggles of a girl who is deaf. From this article, I learned and realized many things such as how difficult lipreading can be. Originally, I was amazed at how deaf people could read lips and thought they could understand every word someone said. However, I learned from this article that that is NOT true and things such as accents and a lack of expression can make it difficult for one to decipher what is being said.
hannahhunsaker24

Yeah, Um… So Like, Are Filler Words Considered Feminine? – Languaged Life - 1 views

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    This study explores the use of filler words through the lens of gender. Filler words are more commonly associated with women due to the "valley-girl" stereotype. However, these researchers found that, while filler words were used more frequently by women in the past, men use tend to use more filler words than women present-day. This paper discusses how the shift in gender roles and social dynamics between the genders contributes to speech patters.
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