NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
Thios, Samuel J.; And Others – 1991
Preschoolers were taped while individually interacting with each of their parents. Tapes were transcribed and the language forms used by children and parents were counted. These forms included constructions involving the contraction "let's"; colloquial lexical items such as "whatchamacallit"; tag questions such as "You're…
Descriptors: Fathers, Language Patterns, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship
Benjamin, Barbaranne J. – 1982
A study investigated differences between older adult male and female voice patterns. In addition, the study examined whether certain differences between male and female speech characteristics were lifelong and not associated with the aging process. Subjects were 10 young (average age 30) and 10 old (average age 75) males and 10 young (average age…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Communication Research, Females
Martin, Judith N.; Craig, Robert T. – 1980
Effects of sex of speaker and sex of dyad partner on selected linguistic variables were examined in four-minute segments of 20 conversations between previously unacquainted college students. Five male dyads, five female dyads, and ten mixed dyads were studied. Three significant interaction effects were found. Males and females produced about the…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Females, Higher Education, Interaction
Chun, Dorothy M. – 1987
An acoustic study of German focused on voice frequency at sentence-, turn-, and discourse-end in conversations. The data were drawn from short dialogues in which the same word occurs at the ends of utterances, in the middle of a turn, at the end of a turn, and at the end of a discourse. The dialogues were read 10 times by a male and a female…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Cues, Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis
Russo, Lisa L. – 1977
An experiment was conducted to investigate the hypothesis that English cliches reflect sex-specific styles of speech and that sex-specificity of expressions is related to differential usage by male and female speakers. Hypotheses were derived from Tyler's claims that the "neutral sphere" is infused by the male style, rendering it an inhibiting…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Females, Idioms, Language Patterns
Milroy, James – 1988
It is suggested that the notion of prestige has been too readily appealed to in explanations of language variation and change, and that such appeals result in apparent contradictions and conceptual confusions. The term "prestige" has been used by sociolinguists in widely differing ways, and, as a result, the nature of the term has become…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Ethnicity, Foreign Countries
Nordenstam, Kerstin – 1990
A study investigated the use of tag questions in the private conversations of Swedish men and women. Conversations took place in single-gender dyads (six with two men and six with two women) and six mixed-gender dyads. Informants were aged approximately 25 or approximately 50, of different social classes, chosen by random selection, and asked to…
Descriptors: Adults, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Interpersonal Communication
Coates, Jennifer – 1988
A discussion of women's oral discourse patterns focuses on the uses made of minimal responses, hedges, and tag questions. The analysis draws on transcriptions of conversations among a group of women friends over a period of months. It is proposed that the conventional treatment of these forms as "weak" is inappropriate in all-female…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Females, Foreign Countries, Interpersonal Communication
Esposito, Anita – 1982
The silence between two people's utterances during conversation is referred to as a juncture pause and the outcome of events at the juncture pause determines who will speak next in a conversation. A study explored the nature of interruptions in young children's conversation and examined whether turn-taking repair occurred after an interruption and…
Descriptors: Child Language, Communication Research, Communication (Thought Transfer), Interaction
Menzel, Peter; Tyler, Mary – 1977
As Labov points out (1971), language is a social phenomenon, and therefore must be studied in its social context; sex based language differences, being part of language, must be studied in the same way. Specifically, sex based language differences can be studied by modifying the sociolinguists' notion of speech community and speech continuum, and…
Descriptors: Females, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Styles
Waters, Betty Lou – 1975
This paper describes the preliminary results of research currently underway concerning sex-based differences in written composition. Sixty themes written by college-age native speakers of English were chosen for study. The themes were typed exactly as they had been written. No corrections were made. They were numbered alphabetically by the names…
Descriptors: College Students, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Usage
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Holmes, Janet – International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1993
Among both first- and second-generation immigrant groups in New Zealand and Australia, women maintain the ethnic language (EL) longer than men. Compared with men's networks, women's networks encourage more extensive use of EL in social interactions, and women value the social and affective functions expressed by EL. (Contains 71 references.…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Comparative Analysis, Cultural Influences, Foreign Countries
Crawford, Mary; And Others – 1983
In a study of the differences in male and female descriptions of nine photographs, picture type was found to be an important variable. Twelve male and 8 female college students were asked to describe each of the photographs. Picture type was rated as high in interest to males, high in interest to females, or high in interest to both. Responses…
Descriptors: College Students, Color, Comparative Analysis, Expressive Language
Cashion, Joan L. – 1985
The research of W. O'Barr and B. K. Atkins found that the use of "women's language" features--the use of tag questions, interrogative intonation, sex-specific vocabulary, hedges and fillers, empty adjectives, and hypercorrect grammar; the inability to tell jokes; and the tendency to use fewer expletives than men--was associated more with…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Communication Skills, Females, Interpersonal Communication
Tyler, Mary – 1976
Paradoxically, linguists' speculations about sex differences in language use are highly plausible and yet have received little empirical support from well controlled studies. An experiment was designed to correct a flaw in earlier methodologies by sampling precisely the kinds of situations in which predicted differences (e.g., swearing,…
Descriptors: Females, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Styles
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3