This thesis is attempt to give a soci-linguistic account of sex-differences in language through men and women terms presented in the dictionary.
With respect to it's form, We can divide it into five parts named men-centric terms, women-centric terms,...
This thesis is attempt to give a soci-linguistic account of sex-differences in language through men and women terms presented in the dictionary.
With respect to it's form, We can divide it into five parts named men-centric terms, women-centric terms, equality terms, men-exclusive terms and women-exclusive terms.
With respect to it's meaning, We can divide it into three parts named men-centric terms, women-centric terms and neutral terms. Women-centric terms have only two items and neutral-terms are consist of science and skill terms that can not reflect human life itself.
So we can conclude that most parts of the men and women terms are Andro-centric terms and this reflects the Andro-centric social context.