age variables displaying effects consistent with the Gender-Linked Language Effect, seven were more indicative
of male speakers: impersonals, fillers, elliptical sentences, units, justifiers, geographical references, and spatial references. Greater use of the other seven variables was more indicative of female speakers: intensive adverbs, personal pronouns, negations, verbs of cognition, dependent clauses with subordinating conjunctions understood,
oppositions, and pauses. These clusters of male and female contributors to the effect are discussed in terms of potential underlying communication
strategies.
1More
1More
Yes, There's Now Science Behind Naming Your Baby | Newsroom - 0 views
1More
Maltz and Borker (1982), "A cultural approach to male-female miscommunication" - 0 views
1More
Choosing a Pronoun: He, She or Other: After Curfew - NYTimes.com - 2 views
1More
Popular whale songs reveal the first ever non-human cultural exchange - 2 views
1More
Gender-neutral pronouns: When 'they' doesn't identify as either male or female - 0 views
1More
For Catholics, the Word Was a Bit Different, Amen - NYTimes.com - 3 views
1More