Language, Gender, and SocietyBarrie Thorne, Cheris Kramarae, Nancy Henley |
Contents
Introduction 357 | 3 |
The Case for Nonsexist Language | 25 |
Prescriptive Grammar and the Pronoun Problem | 38 |
Copyright | |
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adults American analysis analyzed argues assumption Barrie Thorne behavior Black boys Cheris Kramarae child classroom context conversation cross-sex culture Dell Hymes differentiation discussion dyads English essays example fathers female and male feminine feminist feminist aesthetic forms frequently girls grammar grammatical gender groups Howard Giles inexpressiveness interaction interruptions intonation Jean Berko Gleason Journal Lakoff Language and sex language change lesbian linguistic literature male and female Martyna Mary masculine mixed-sex mothers Nancy Henley Newbury House nonsexist language nonverbal nonverbal communication nouns Paper given patterns person politics prescriptive prescriptive grammar Press pronoun Psychology refer same-sex Sapir-Whorf hypothesis semantic sentences sex differences Sex Roles sexist language sexual social sociolinguistic Sociology speakers speaking speech community stereotypes strategies style suggests Susan tag questions talk tapes teachers topics Univ usage utterances verbal voices woman Women and language Women's language women's speech Women's Studies words writing York