allthingslinguistic:

speibecken:

Lakoff argues that the very things career
coaches advise women to cut out of their speech are actually signs of
highly evolved communication. When we use words like so, I guess, like, actually, and I mean,
we are sending signals to the listener to help them figure out whatโ€™s
new, whatโ€™s important, or whatโ€™s funny. Weโ€™re connecting with them.
โ€œRather than being weakeners or signs of fuzziness of mind, as is often
said, they create cohesion and coherence between what speaker and hearer
together need to accomplish โ€” understanding and sharing,โ€ Lakoff says.
โ€œThis is the major job of an articulate social species. If women use
these forms more, it is because we are better at being human.โ€

Language is not always about making an argument or conveying information in the cleanest, simplest way possible. Itโ€™s often about building relationships.

A quote from the articleย โ€œCan We Just Like, Get Over the Way Women Talk?โ€ which is worth reading in full.

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