Chapter 10:gender Group 10
Chapter 10:gender Group 10
Chapter 10:gender Group 10
Created by:
GROUP 10
Gustian (521300178)
Muhammad Harist (521300180)
Novita Sari Dewi (521300217)
(IKIP-PGRI PONTIANAK)
2015
PREFACE
Praise is always given to God Almighty for the blessings of his grace and
that we were given the opportunity to be able to finish a working paper which is
going to discuss around a branch of linguistics or sociology, specifically,
Sociolinguistics.
The compilers also thanked to Mrs. Desi Sri Astuti as the sepurvior of
Sociolinguistic subject who has given direction and help in the order to do and to
complete this paper.
Hopefully, this paper can benefit for whoever read it and give a broader
insight about the topic. Nonetheless, this paper is far from perfect that useful
suggestions are perfectly accepted for the paper to be better. Thank you.
Author
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Table of Content
page
PREFACE ...................................................................................................... i
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................... iii
CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION ................................................................................................ 1
CHAPTER III
CONCLUSION .............................................................................................. 10
BIBLIOGRAPHY .......................................................................................... 11
ii
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
A. BACKGROUND
iii
C. THE PURPOSE OF THE PROBLEM
a. To account for what Gender and language will be around in
Sociolinguistics
b. To know the distinction between exclusive gender and preferential
gender
c. To know the principle of gender
iv
CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION
1
In the other hand, Gender is social and cultural category. It is a
social property: something acquired or constructed through your
relationships with others and through an individuals adherence to
certain cultural norms and proscriptions. Miriam Meyerhoff (2006:
201) defines gender as not grammatical gender (i.e., different classes
of noun that may be called masculine, feminine). Not sex of
speaker which (largely) reflects biological or physiological differences
between people. Moreover, Coates (2004: 4) tries to differentiate the
distinction of terms between sex and gender where the sex is a term
used to differentiate biological differences and gender is a term to
depicted social category based on sex.
The use of Exclusive Gender is rather rare and only found or seen
in particular societies. There would be sort of phenomenon where to
speak the variety of the other gender is forbidden for a woman or a
man. Gender Exclusive Differentiation means different speech
varieties used by men and women in few societies. That is used by
only one gender, by either males or females.
2
My Auntie Sarah
The phrase above tells to us that the person you are referring to is
female. Similarly, the terms grandson and niece respectively tell you
the referents are male and female.
3
Yanyuwa Child buyuka-la at/with the fire
(Pama-Nyungan,
Northern Territory and Male ji-buyuka-la at/with the fire
Queensland, Australia)
Female ki-buyuka-la at/with the fire
4
men do not, such as, aquamarine, magenta, rose, paisley, burgundy,
chartreuse, and crimson. Whereas males prefer much more around
men activities like hunting, car or sport.
5
the process of conversational back-channeling to keep the conversation
going. As for males, they like to interrupt the speech of others,
particularly females speech, take a longer turn in conversation while
females usually tend to operate the strategy of silent protest in this kind
of case.
D. PRINCIPLES OF GENDER
6
(dh) variable: women [] > men []
negative concord: women I didnt do anything > men
7
indicating womens greater sensitivity to what is considered standard
and non-standard.
The shift to r-ful speech is led overall by higher class speakers and
it is more frequently in careful speaking styles and when respondents
were given tasks like reading aloud. However, Labov also found that
within each social class, (r) use was usually more frequently in the
speech of women than in the speech of men. As a group, working-class
women used more tokens of (r) than working class men did as a group,
although he noted some individual exceptions to the group patterns as
well. In addition to the evidence from style-shifting, it is clear from the
way most New Yorkers talked about [r] presence and absence that
New Yorkers generally prefer or value r-ful speech more highly than r-
less pronunciations.
8
3. Principle II. Change in progress below the level of awareness:
women use more of the incoming variant than men
9
CHAPTER III
CONCLUSION AND SUGGESTION
A. CONCLUSION
B. SUGGESTON
10
Bibliography
11