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     Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology


Male-Female Discourse Difference in Terms of Lexical Density

1Manizheh Alami, 2Maryam Sabbah and 3Mohammad Iranmanesh
1Department of English and Literature, Islamic Azad University, Tabriz Branch, Tabriz, Iran
2Instructional Technology and Multimedia, University Sains Malaysia
3Department of Management, Main Campus, University Sains Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia
Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology  2013  23:5365-5369
http://dx.doi.org/10.19026/rjaset.5.4202  |  © The Author(s) 2013
Received: August 16, 2012  |  Accepted: September 17, 2012  |  Published: May 28, 2013

Abstract

The development of gender roles often begins as early as infancy. Being at the centre, gender manifests itself in any subtle and trivial aspect of our social life. From the time we are very small, it is ever present in any aspect of our life, in conversation, humor, conflict and so on. The overwhelming studies on the differences between men/women speech style represents the significance of the issue. The present study is an attempt to investigate whether the speaker’s gender (being a male/female) contributes to the lexical density of their discourse. In other words, whether the lexical density of discourse is sensitive to the gender of the speaker? It is a data-driven, empirical study based on the transcribed recorded talk-in interactions between men and women. Text Content Analysis Tool (TCAT) was used to measure the lexical density of male/female speaker’s discourse and to count the total number of words used by male/female speakers. The results of Chi-square test show that there is not a statistically significance difference between the lexical density of men and women discourse (p >0.157). However, there is a negative relationship between the lexical density of discourse and discourse length. In other words, the more word counts (689 words) the lower lexical density (0.33.67%) and vice versa the less word used by the speaker (31) the higher lexical density of the discourse (90.32%).

Keywords:

Discourse analysis, gender, lexical density, TCAT, word count,


References


Competing interests

The authors have no competing interests.

Open Access Policy

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

Copyright

The authors have no competing interests.

ISSN (Online):  2040-7467
ISSN (Print):   2040-7459
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