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American English Booklet11

1.6. Male-female differences

Many Americans have now confronted the issue of language sexism. Concern for gender equality in American society encompasses language issues along with other sociopolitical concerns. In most studies of male-female differences the term “gender” is used in the meaning of “the complex of social, cultural and psychological phenomena affected to sex” (Mc Connel - Ginet 1988). The term “sex” refers simply to female and male physiology.

One of the general findings regarding male-female differences is that women tend to use more standard language features than men, whose speech tends to be more vernacular:

The second finding is that women tend to adopt innovative language features much more quickly than men. In other words, women tend to lead in linguistic change.