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Original Articles

Political and pedagogical implications of attitudes towards women's language

Pages 133-138 | Published online: 21 May 2009

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Read on this site (3)

Shane Miller. (1997) The woven gender: Made for a woman, but stronger for a man. Southern Communication Journal 62:3, pages 217-228.
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LynnH. Turner, Kathryn Dindia & JudyC. Pearson. (1995) An investigation of female/male verbal behaviors in same‐sex and mixed‐sex conversations. Communication Reports 8:2, pages 86-96.
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SallyJ. Perkins. (1989) The rhetoric of androgyny as revealed in the feminine mystique . Communication Studies 40:2, pages 69-80.
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Articles from other publishers (4)

Margaret Thomas. (2013) Otto Jespersen and “The Woman”, then and now. Historiographia Linguistica 40:3, pages 377-408.
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Aki Uchida. (2008) When “difference” is “dominance”: A critique of the “anti-power-based” cultural approach to sex differences. Language in Society 21:4, pages 547-568.
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Elizabeth Tebeaux. (2016) Toward an Understanding of Gender Differences in Written Business Communications: A Suggested Perspective for Future Research. Journal of Business and Technical Communication 4:1, pages 25-43.
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Anne BETTEN. 1989. Dialoganalyse II. Dialoganalyse II 265 276 .

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