Results 271 to 280 of about 551,295 (340)

Foreword

open access: yes, 2014
THORNTON, ANNA MARIA   +5 more
core  

The Gendering of Language: A Comparison of Gender Equality in Countries with Gendered, Natural Gender, and Genderless Languages

Sex Roles, 2011
Feminists have long argued that sexist language can have real world consequences for gender relations and the relative status of men and women, and recent research suggests that grammatical gender can shape how people interpret the world around them along gender lines (Boroditsky 2009).
T Andrew Caswell
exaly   +2 more sources

Gendered language and the educational gender gap

Economics Letters, 2016
Languages differ in the degree to which they employ gender distinctions for nouns and pronouns. Speaking a more gendered language may highlight gender in the mind of the speaker, leading to more pronounced gender roles, and is associated with lower female labor force participation rates, earlier female marriage, and greater fertility.
Lewis Davis, Megan Reynolds
openaire   +2 more sources

Japanese language and gender research

Gender and Language, 2021
In the past thirty years, major contributions from Japanese language and gender studies have provided necessary insights from the perspective of a non-European language.
S. Okamoto
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Perceiving gender while perceiving language: Integrating psycholinguistics and gender theory.

Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science, 2021
There is a substantial body of literature showing that men and women speak differently and that these differences are endemic to the speech signal. However, the psycholinguistic mechanisms underlying the integration of social category perception and ...
Alayo Tripp, B. Munson
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Where Is the Gender in Gendered Language?

Psychological Science, 2001
The purpose of these studies was to examine how women and men react and accommodate to gender-preferential language in e-mail messages. In Experiment 1, participants wrote messages to two assigned “netpals.” These netpals were actually one of the experimenters.
R, Thomson, T, Murachver, J, Green
openaire   +2 more sources

Why don’t “real men” learn languages? Masculinity threat and gender ideology suppress men’s language learning motivation

Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 2020
Large gender disparities in participation still exist across many university subjects and career fields, but few studies have examined factors that account for gender gaps in female-dominated disciplines.
K. Chaffee   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Just Reading? How Gender-Fair Language Triggers Readers’ Use of Gender-Fair Forms

open access: yesJournal of Language and Social Psychology, 2015
Gender-fair language, that is, referring to men and women with symmetrical linguistic forms, has been found to promote gender equality, but it is largely unknown which factors help make gender-fair forms more common in everyday life. Two studies examined
Sabine Sczesny
exaly   +2 more sources

Programming languages and gender

Communications of the ACM, 2004
Comparing differences and similarities in programming language usage according to programmer gender.
Ronald Dattero, Stuart Diaz Galup
openaire   +1 more source

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