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Japanese Language, Gender, and Ideology: Cultural Models and Real People (Studies in Language and Gender) by
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Khari
is on page 42 of 300
"These how-to books thus promote the notion that women's attractiveness depends on their appearance (beauty), which is in part determined by their good upbringing and education, including the knowledge of honorifics."
This is probably true, one of my samples of manga is a Pretty Cure spinoff where all of these silver spoon young ladies are in a boarding school and their language is INCREDIBLY formal and stilted.
— Jan 02, 2026 06:37AM
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This is probably true, one of my samples of manga is a Pretty Cure spinoff where all of these silver spoon young ladies are in a boarding school and their language is INCREDIBLY formal and stilted.
Khari
is on page 41 of 300
"There are also numerous books, magazine articles, and other materials on how to use honorifics 'correctly', which suggests that knowledge of honorifics is not evenly distributed in the society and that many native speakers aspire to acquire it, because they consider it linguistic capital for improving their social status."
— Jan 02, 2026 06:33AM
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Khari
is on page 41 of 300
No one ever asks 'why' in these studies.
Women have no place in society, therefore they are more aware and concerned about appearances.
Uh. Egalitarian societies still tend to have women concerned of and aware of appearances. The question is WHY women are concerned about appearances, if it is something that is universal, and it certainly seems so, to the point that it's in the animal kingdom, the question is WHY?
— Jan 01, 2026 05:45PM
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Women have no place in society, therefore they are more aware and concerned about appearances.
Uh. Egalitarian societies still tend to have women concerned of and aware of appearances. The question is WHY women are concerned about appearances, if it is something that is universal, and it certainly seems so, to the point that it's in the animal kingdom, the question is WHY?
Khari
is on page 40 of 300
Ooooh!
Finally! I'm actually learning something from this book. I knew about 尊敬語 and 謙譲語 but 美化語 is new to me.
Makes complete sense. Onaka tsuita. Isn't lifting up the stomach, it's just making it sound prettier.
— Dec 31, 2025 08:21AM
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Finally! I'm actually learning something from this book. I knew about 尊敬語 and 謙譲語 but 美化語 is new to me.
Makes complete sense. Onaka tsuita. Isn't lifting up the stomach, it's just making it sound prettier.
Khari
is on page 29 of 300
You're damned if you make the sex of a woman, you're damned if you don't.
Feminist linguistic studies, the ultimate expression of the phrase 'shifting the goal posts'.
I can't wait to read one that says having a gender system is the ultimate franchisement of women.
— Nov 06, 2025 04:35PM
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Feminist linguistic studies, the ultimate expression of the phrase 'shifting the goal posts'.
I can't wait to read one that says having a gender system is the ultimate franchisement of women.
Khari
is on page 29 of 300
Gosh. You cannot win.
This is one book about feminism "She identified several conventional sexist practices, including (1) unnecessarily marking women 'female company president' etc."
The other feminist book, about erasing women from data sets gets made because they just say 'doctor' or 'president' instead of 'female doctor' because obviously everyone just imagines a male if you say 'doctor' or 'president.'
— Nov 06, 2025 04:34PM
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This is one book about feminism "She identified several conventional sexist practices, including (1) unnecessarily marking women 'female company president' etc."
The other feminist book, about erasing women from data sets gets made because they just say 'doctor' or 'president' instead of 'female doctor' because obviously everyone just imagines a male if you say 'doctor' or 'president.'
Khari
is on page 29 of 300
Wow. I found something I agreed with in this book!
to paraphrase: Not enough linguists go out and look at actual language use.
So true!
The difference is that I find this in all linguists, she seems to only find it among those she disagrees with. I wonder if she disagrees with...oh, who was it that wrote the entire book on questionnaires of what women think is gendered language? Maynard?...no...Takemaru!
— Nov 04, 2025 05:43PM
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to paraphrase: Not enough linguists go out and look at actual language use.
So true!
The difference is that I find this in all linguists, she seems to only find it among those she disagrees with. I wonder if she disagrees with...oh, who was it that wrote the entire book on questionnaires of what women think is gendered language? Maynard?...no...Takemaru!
Khari
is on page 27 of 300
"topics chosen specifically for a female audience. Women's magazines are filled with articles on fashion, homemaking, and the private affairs of celebrities."
Yes. Is this because they are chosen specifically for a female audience, or is it because this is what female audiences are interested in?
— Nov 03, 2025 04:57PM
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Yes. Is this because they are chosen specifically for a female audience, or is it because this is what female audiences are interested in?
Khari
is on page 26 of 300
"(3) an abundant use of the second-person pronoun anata 'you' instead of ellipsis to directly address the reader, which -being a typical feature of advertisements-treats women as if they were more susceptible to insincere seduction."
I wonder if she considered genre or register at all, because I think mine is showing the opposite, more pronoun usage in male targeted speech. But, maybe not.
— Oct 06, 2025 05:37PM
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I wonder if she considered genre or register at all, because I think mine is showing the opposite, more pronoun usage in male targeted speech. But, maybe not.
Khari
is on page 26 of 300
"(2) a smaller number of proper nouns, which implies that women are less interested than men in learning about the world,"
...how? That's a seriously big jump.
— Oct 06, 2025 05:36PM
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...how? That's a seriously big jump.
Khari
is on page 26 of 300
"The first component of onnarashii kotoba is language used with a female audience in mind. Jugaku's quantitative study of women's magazines had revealed some distinctive stylistic features, including (1) a greater percentage of exclamatory and uncompleted sentences, which reflects a belief in women's emotionality and lack of logical thinking..."
It could also reflect a belief in women's superior ability to decode
— Oct 06, 2025 05:35PM
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It could also reflect a belief in women's superior ability to decode
Khari
is on page 17 of 300
...choices and their social meanings."
— May 23, 2025 02:48PM
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Khari
is on page 17 of 300
...to establish solidarity among local people. but this does not mean that they are either rejecting conventional gender or sexual norms or trying to express masculinity. The meanings of ore and boku are, we see, highly context-dependent. In like manner...only a close examination of language use in real contexts enables us to fully understand the complex and dynamic relationship between specific linguistic...
— May 23, 2025 02:48PM
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Khari
is on page 17 of 300
...to reject traditional femininity, or to be nonconformist, bur they are not indexing masculinity. Women at lesbian bars may use ore to establish solidarity with the interlocutor, while at the same time rejecting the dominant gender and sexual norms, but again their use of ore does not index masculinity. Farm women in rural areas of Tohoku may use ore regularly...as part of their regional dialect, which can serve...
— May 23, 2025 02:47PM
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Khari
is on page 17 of 300
For example, the pronouns boku and ore are both typically characterized as 'masculine' first-person. However, the meanings conveyed by these pronouns in specific contexts are far more complex than this characterization offers. For example, high school boys use ore to index relative powerfulness rather than simple male speakerhood and boku to index relative powerlessness. High school girls may also use ore (or boku)..
— May 23, 2025 02:46PM
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Khari
is on page 16 of 300
particles to index (traditional) masculinity (although they may resort to other means to do so). Rather, they use sentence-final particles to express a variety of pragmatic meanings; for example, 'masculine' or forceful, expressions are used to signal camaraderie, authority, anger, and so on."
— May 23, 2025 02:44PM
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Khari
is on page 16 of 300
Her analyses of the use of sentence-final particles in their conversations exhibit not only individual and regional differences but also considerable 'deviation' from the normative usage, which undermines the idea that there is a single 'Japanese men's language.' Based on her finding that all speakers used 'masculine' forms relatively infrequently Sturts concludes that these men do not utilize sentence-final...
— May 23, 2025 02:43PM
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Khari
is on page 16 of 300
"Miyazaki demonstrates how the students use pronouns to index a multitude of pragmatic meanings that concern not only femininity and masculinity but also levels of formality, power, and solidarity."
— May 19, 2025 05:47PM
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Khari
is on page 15 of 300
"[Lesbian] speakers shift speech styles [in pronoun usage] depending on the context (e.g., interlocutors, speech act types)."
— May 19, 2025 05:46PM
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Khari
is on page 14 of 300
"They examine actual speech data closely with regard to the use of linguistic features that are normally associated with gender, such as self-references and address terminology....The results reveal impressive variation and extensive 'deviations' from normative or stereotypical usage, suggesting that 'deviant' uses are meaningful choices rather than mere exceptions or anomalies."
— May 19, 2025 05:41PM
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Khari
is on page 12 of 300
"...young women or young men into the discursively constructed "magazine community"- and to attact, thereby, a regular subscriber and purchaser base."
— Apr 28, 2025 03:54PM
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