Women and Language in Australian and New Zealand SocietyAnne Pauwels Language and gender research including role of Aboriginal women in language change and language maintenance; paper by Jakelin Troy on Aboriginal women and contact languages separately annotated. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 54
Page 47
... examples illustrate the distinction made : Example A ยท Interviewer : What sort of things would your father get really mad about ? 8B : 2 Oh , I useta ask him , ' Can I go down the pool ? ... ' Example B Interviewer : Did you know these ...
... examples illustrate the distinction made : Example A ยท Interviewer : What sort of things would your father get really mad about ? 8B : 2 Oh , I useta ask him , ' Can I go down the pool ? ... ' Example B Interviewer : Did you know these ...
Page 48
... example , seen , done as in : ( 1 ) He woke up an seen something ( IB / M / 14-4 ) 3 ( 2 ) Steve went an done the same ( 2B / M / 13-11 ) ( ii ) Non - standard past participle forms . For example , took , went as in : ( 3 ) There's ...
... example , seen , done as in : ( 1 ) He woke up an seen something ( IB / M / 14-4 ) 3 ( 2 ) Steve went an done the same ( 2B / M / 13-11 ) ( ii ) Non - standard past participle forms . For example , took , went as in : ( 3 ) There's ...
Page 65
... examples of their use to soften or attenuate ' FTAs [ face - threatening speech acts ] of suggesting or criticising or complaining by blurring the speaker's intent ' ( 1978 : 122 ) . Example ( 8 ) is taken from my data : ( 8 ) they were ...
... examples of their use to soften or attenuate ' FTAs [ face - threatening speech acts ] of suggesting or criticising or complaining by blurring the speaker's intent ' ( 1978 : 122 ) . Example ( 8 ) is taken from my data : ( 8 ) they were ...
Contents
Notes on contributors iv | 5 |
research in New Zealand | 32 |
Sex differences in intergroup and intragroup | 45 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Aboriginal women activities adult analysis appear associated Australian avoidance behaviour boys British cent characters child colonists communication contact languages context conversational corpus course described devices differences discussion distribution early Education effect English evidence examined example express female Figure forms frequently function gender girls given guidelines hedges Holmes important indicated instances interaction interest interpretation interviewer introduction issue Jane language language and gender linguistic London male marital status married meaning Miss mothers newspapers non-sexist non-standard noted Occurrences parents particles particular patterns personal title Peter politeness present Press proposals question reading refer regarding relations relationship role says seen sexism shows social society sort speakers speech standard suggested Table tags University users variation wife woman women young Zealand