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Maledicta.) âthis essay is pure original research, with author making false references to support the essayâs claims. and while some statements of the researcher are correct and i are 14 years together already"], other ones, and, the most importantly, main subject âlesbian speech âare a pile of spam. the essay is written in extremely poorly style, has constant jumpoffs off of the discussed topic and uses obscure literary and movie sources as references. that might be attributed to kinda speech impairment (dyslexia) or a mental condition (ADHD), and we might say that is totally fine to have another author interested in our culture ...BUT WHAT is the content? 65% âgays, 15% âobscure popular culture, 10% âpsychiatry + sociology surveys ...10% (!!!) lesbian slang and lesbian mentality. i understand
Knowledge CANNOT accept original research made by a lesbian to source its article , but here is **Original Lesbian Disclaimer** âof EIGHT lesbians i ever knew NO ONE EVER used slang words listed at aforementioned essay as "genuinely" lesbian! We Just Talk! (indeed the essayâs author acknowledes this fact, but it seemed to be a ray of Sun in a oneâseat gayâWC, that the essay indeed is) *****not sorry***** best regards from a true butch!!! Zoila
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performative utterances may have had an influence on queer studies, feminist theory and so on, I don't see how it is directly relevant to the use of language to bind together and provide distinctiveness for, say, the gay community. If one thinks about, say, a religious community, there are shared ways of speaking and using language (say, the reading of the Bible or Qu'ran). There are words used that people outside of that community are less likely to use and which are used to bind the community together (certain prayers or hymns or poems). In the broad sense of "performative", a priest reading out the Nicene Creed in Church is performativeâit is said to bind the church together and to remind people what it is they (ought to) believe as members. The same is true in a community like the LGBT community: someone standing at an equal marriage rally listing reasons why same-sex marriage ought to be legal is engaging in a performance (trying to convince people, trying to fire people up, trying to give rhetorical ammunition to campaigners when they are discussing it with opponents) but they aren't engaging in a performative utterance in the sense Austin is describing.
852:. The classic examples are things like a person naming a ship: the delegated person smashing the bottle of champagne on the bow of the ship and saying "the USS " names the ship. Or the priest or officiant in a wedding: by saying "I pronounce you husband and wife" (or husband and husband, or wife and wife now) and having the relevant permissions from church and/or state, the officiant makes the two people married by saying the relevant phrases. These are performative utterances because the act of saying them changes some fact about the world, unlike a descriptive utterance which simply describes the world around the speaker, or an imperative, which asks for someone to change the world ("Close the window!").
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1468:. There's plenty of talk about redoing the article. I decided to take on some of those changes being discussed, so actually your claim that I'm coming out of nowhere with these edits is unfounded. The page has long been a mess and needs a massive cleanup, so your arguments about time-lengths don't seem compelling. Also, I notice you're not listing any exact grievances, as specifically asked.
1294:â This article's scope is huge, appearing to cover any linguistics/speechways of LGBT-identifying people, not simply one man's (William Leap's) 1990 perspective that he termed "lavender linguistics". Also LGBT linguistics seems to be a more neutral and quickly identifiable name than the more obscure/esoteric current title.
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Section "Accents of
English" subsection "Lesbians" include a poorly sourced assertion: " lesbians may have more slang than gay males, with one article listing nearly eighty common lesbian slang words for sexual acts and organs." ( Ashley, Leonard R.N. (1982). "Dyke Diction: The Language of Lesbians".
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I like how Auburn's experiment results were added to the page. I think it's a great addition contributes to the page. However, I would like to just make a change in wording in the sentence "Auburn Barron-Lutzross performed an experiment in which listeners ranked female speakers on a scale from âleast
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For non-binary lexicon, I believe the principle of indexical disjuncture should be highlighted because given that non-binary identities have more access to linguistic resources, it is possible that the linguistics resources chosen in the construction of a non-binary identity can create juxtaposition
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I agree that there should be more information about bisexual people on this page. I added some information from a study which included bisexual women to the "Lesbian speech patterns" section, but I don't know of any studies which look at bisexual men's speech. (At least, not as a separate category
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The article also says "shared identity can in some cases be strengthened through shared forms of language use and used for political organizing as Austin describes". I'm not familiar with Austin having ever described shared language use as a tool for political organizing. Though Austin's theory of
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Well, for one, I think anytime anything sourced is removed, it should be taken to the talk page. When you are deleting huge chunks of sections, that should be discussed with the community. I also think reconfiguring the page should be discussed by the community. The current configuration has been
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For the new bit that was added, I think it is good, but maybe mention how Gay speech is associated with 'femininity' with the use of parodies. Also for minor grammar edits in the sentence "These particular speech traits maybe be spread," (take out the 'be'). Also for the sentence "why is speech
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I see mentions in this article about transvestites, transsexuals, gay men, lesbians and heterosexual women. This is all great. But in spite of the fact that bisexuals represent the third letter in the LGBTQ acronym -- a topic that this page claims to deal with -- I see no mention whatsoever of
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assumed that the first author was correct. I'm sure there are some people who have built theories on top of Austin's that explain the kind of performance that is being referred to in this context: if we can find sources for those, great, but let's not suggest Austin is behind this use of the
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No they do have a point, there is no reason why this article should be 100% focused on
English just because this is the English Knowledge. Now the answer is obviously not to rename the whole article to avoid trying to improve it, but to find proper sources talking about other languages as
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likely to be a lesbianâ to âmost likely to be a lesbianâ. I would suggest that the word "performed" could be changed to something like "conducted" or "ran" because the page already mentions gender performance so I find the use of performed in this sentence a little confusing.
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I am fond of this section, as speech patterns of transgender individuals are examined in studies that are within 10 years. I am also very impressed with discussion of the lexicon of non-binary individuals. Here are a few things that I would like to recommend per section:
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I was wondering if the editor was stating that parts of the article should be in non-English. Discussing non-English aspects is fine, but the article shouldn't be moved to their proposed name. And as for globalizing? The editor should review what
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As far as I know, I didn't delete any sourced material. I made DELIBERATELY sure that I didn't, unless it was blatantly superfluous (and I still don't think I did in that case anyway). Look at the recent move discussion on
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around for a long time, with a lot of
Knowledge contributors editing it with that configuration. I'm not 100 percent against these changes, but I think the community should discuss these things when it happens.
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I was thinking that the trans section about discursive language should include reference to the avoidance by trans people and trans allies to associate "male" and "female" with references to gender.
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of language to communicate is a kind of "performance" but this is not the sense Austin is getting at. Instead, he's describing performative utterances where the act of saying something
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I never said that parts of the article shouldn't be in
English. I just mean that other languages should be added to the article. I dont know the exact tag for that. Regards,
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I think we can leave the name of the page as is. As you say, Jeromi, other languages can be added to the article. You certainly can feel free to make such additions.
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For transgender (MtF and FtM) speech patterns, it is succinct on its own, but if time permits, I would like to recommend the addition of more studies!
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Are there any examples of this in film and television? In other words, has it been written into roles? Most recently, I'm thinking of
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When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
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introduced the idea without any extra sourcing from what went before, and then in an attempt at copyediting
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If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with
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Should be renamed to LGBT linguistics in
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https://web.archive.org/web/20070701205735/http://nsrc.sfsu.edu/MagArticle.cfm?Article=601&PageID=0
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Feel free to state your position on the renaming proposal by beginning a new line in this section with
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associated that is associated with masculinity constrained?" ( take out "that is associated")
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Thanks for the comments! I have just tried to mention indexical disjuncture in this section!
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hyper-flexible term "performance" and "performative", because it isn't what he meant. â
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Added a bit from the Zimman reading about genital language and intersex experiences.
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in the banner shell. Please resolve this conflict if possible.
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Start-Class articles with conflicting quality ratings
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The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a
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1352:Talk:Gay male speech#Requested move 6 April 2018
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1678:**Original Lesbian Disclaimer**
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1135:Hello fellow Wikipedians,
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342:Section name
244:LGBT studies
235:project page
223:
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216:LGBTQ portal
185:LGBT studies
121:
68:WikiProjects
35:
1685:92.51.5.212
1665:MickRide808
1543:-- states.
1539:-- the tag
1451:Supermos127
1429:Supermos127
1413:move review
1260:move review
850:makes it so
832:J.L. Austin
188:Startâclass
137:Linguistics
128:linguistics
87:Linguistics
1726:Categories
1541:they added
1231:Report bug
1104:Rtzentmyer
1045:Hmfergus90
890:Sweet byrd
883:Bisexuals?
870:Tom Morris
775:References
239:discussion
1710:Viriditas
1640:Finelingu
1214:this tool
1207:this tool
1075:Philmon88
959:Got you!
865:this diff
861:this diff
514:Phonetics
441:Phonetics
1375:per nom
1333:. Since
1273:Dekimasu
1220:Cheers.â
762:See also
557:"Faggot"
499:Pronouns
413:Lesbians
28:deletion
1568:Wolfdog
1518:well.--
1470:Wolfdog
1435:Wolfdog
1373:Support
1348:Support
1296:Wolfdog
1144:my edit
1118:Downsoc
806:64,589
666:11,806
578:20,692
398:Gay men
371:History
350:Section
58:B-class
1309:Survey
1029:Sure!
975:Lccady
918:Auburn
905:Lccady
803:64,589
756:1,975
748:Hijras
741:1,543
726:4,255
711:3,554
696:1,520
681:2,392
653:2,914
638:2,952
623:2,984
608:1,670
593:8,309
565:2,310
550:2,026
542:"Dyke"
535:6,299
522:1,406
507:3,344
492:5,082
479:2,915
464:2,178
449:2,059
434:8,301
421:4,984
406:2,300
391:7,309
378:1,803
365:1,859
352:total
64:scale.
800:Total
753:1,975
738:1,543
733:Bakla
708:3,554
693:1,520
678:2,392
650:2,914
635:2,952
620:2,984
605:1,670
590:8,309
575:1,863
562:2,310
547:2,026
532:1,963
528:Slang
519:1,406
504:3,344
476:2,915
461:2,178
446:2,059
431:1,149
418:4,984
403:2,300
375:1,803
362:1,859
358:(Top)
347:count
263:Start
231:LGBTQ
1714:talk
1689:talk
1669:talk
1644:talk
1608:talk
1572:talk
1549:talk
1524:talk
1509:talk
1474:talk
1455:talk
1439:talk
1364:talk
1356:here
1330:~~~~
1300:talk
1122:talk
1108:talk
1094:talk
1079:talk
1049:talk
1035:talk
1021:talk
979:talk
965:talk
951:talk
909:talk
894:talk
874:talk
795:614
769:792
345:Byte
301:here
36:keep
34:was
1405:.
1358:).
1188:RfC
1158:to
846:use
836:not
792:614
782:32
766:792
723:737
489:332
156:???
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1290:â
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