genderlects

filomena sandalo fsandalo at GMAIL.COM
Tue May 29 16:50:07 UTC 2012


Olá Françoise

Sim, Kadiwéu tem esta diferença e eu escrevi o que sei até agora sobre isso
no MIT Working Papers in Linguistics de 97 e em um livro sobre Kadiwéu, que
se chama "Kadiweu: Senhoras da arte, Senhores da Guerra. Espero que sejam
úteis.

Filomena

2012/5/24 Francoise Rose <Francoise.Rose at univ-lyon2.fr>

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> Dear all, ****
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> I am preparing a review on distinctions in male and female speeches in
> Amazonian languages. Borges (2000) already listed the following languages
> as showing this type of contrasts: Chiquitano, Cocáma, Island Carib,
> Karajá, Pirahã, Xavante, Guajiro, Nambikwára, Kamaiurá.****
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> I’ve also found mention of distinctions between male and female speeches
> in the following languages: Kayabí, Mojeño, Awetí, Yawalapiti, Araona,
> Garifuna, Kadiweu, Siriono, Tembé, Tapirapé.****
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> I would be glad to hear about other languages that display such a
> distinction. I will let you know when the paper is ready!****
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> Very best,****
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> Françoise****
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> Borges, M. V., 2000, "O fenômeno da diferenciação entre as falas feminina
> e masculina em línguas indígenas", in *Revista do Museu Antropológico,
> Goiânia, *Vol. 3/4:1, pp. 75-103.****
>
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> Françoise ROSE****
>
> Chargée de Recherches 1ère classe CNRS****
>
> Laboratoire Dynamique Du Langage****
>
> Institut des Sciences de l’Homme****
>
> 14 avenue Berthelot****
>
> 69 363 Lyon cedex 07****
>
> (33)4 72 72 64 63****
>
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>  
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-- 
Filomena
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