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<title>Language and woman's place / Robin Lakoff.</title>
<description>Robin Lakoff is one of the so-called &amp;quot;first generation&amp;quot; of linguists to look at women's speech as being quantitatively different from men's speech, and also one of the first generation of feminists to look towards linguistics as a scientific study to which to prove inherent sexism in language.&amp;nbsp; Although this text is dated (1975), it does serve as a key cited secondary reference for many of the articles published recently about gender and discourse.&amp;nbsp; Even other linguists who go on to refute Lakoff's dichotomies continue to cite her work regularly.&amp;nbsp; For my purposes, I may choose to quote from part 2 of her book &amp;quot;Why Women are Ladies&amp;quot; which deals with forms of politeness and how women specifically express politeness in speech, topics which I feel are still relevant today on the internet.</description>
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