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I hope Marlow seeks higher ground, and always takes the high road.
Wise words, amigo, I hope so too!
Speaking of tides, just got back from the beach where it's only 98 freakin' degrees! :shock: Florida in the summer . . . like Hades, only hotter.
Or maybe an isthmus ? Gawd, that's hard to say with a peanut butter sandwich in your mouth. If the ocean levels rise even a little, I hope Marlow seeks higher ground, and always takes the high road.
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Wome are very sensitive to the wording of something. I have seen plenty of fights and hurt feelings result from the misunderstanding of a single word. Women need to know exactly what the person meant; men seems to let it just roll off ther backs.
...
If only this were the case on these message boards...
I am no expert on email styles and gender nor do I receive work related emails.
I do read a few forums that are frequented by mostly females and there is a huge difference in how women express themselves as compared to men and what they are willing to share with the world!
Wome are very sensitive to the wording of something. I have seen plenty of fights and hurt feelings result from the misunderstanding of a single word. Women need to know exactly what the person meant; men seems to let it just roll off ther backs.
I think you are right that women, in general, like to express the emotion that goes along with their response to things they write.
Interestingly, I have noticed the same phenomenom again and again over
the last few weeks. Women, on average, use much more exclamation
marks, smileys, ``lol''s, capitalized words, etc.---often to the point
where it becomes annoying to me. About two weeks ago, I read a message
on another message board which contained (guesstimate) twenty
sentence---and twenty times ``lol''.
My hypothesis is that this is due to the more emotionally driven
communication style that women have (compared to men): They try to
bring over their emotions by using these means, where the average man
would focus on thoughts or use just words for emotional content.
I would be genuinely interested in hearing the women's take on this
hypothesis.
As for myself, I tend to be very restrictive, possibly even
underusing these means. (Instead, I focus on confusing people with
over-complicated and sometimes incorrect grammar.)
I just received this email: "OH!!! Certainly! Hope you’re having a BLAST!"
from a 30ish female coworker. I (male) would never send an email like that. What I mean by that is all of the !'s and caps. Would any of you males ever send one like that?
Well, YES, I WOULD!!!! (and I do)
E-mail (and posts on message boards) are too impersonal and 'boring' for my standards. I am way to upbeat and enthusiastic about others (and life in general) to post the above with something like this (which I see all the time):
"My response is in the affirmative, and I am pleased that you are enjoying your stay there. "
Dang it - seize the freakin' day! Would it kill you to appear as though you REALLY appreciated the note and genuinely LIKE the other person??!! :wink:
It depends. If informal and to a friend, yes. Written language is definitely changing due to computers. Obviously texting is an extreme example but the above example is showing more emotion than if written as recommeded by strunk. I see it as representing an extra layer of information and don't find it that grating in an informal setting.
I didn't find it grating at all. It was just an observation of one difference between the sexes. My wife (50ish) told me that she sends message like that all the time.
I would find it grating in a more formal setting. It may well be a difference between older men and women but I doubt it is for teens.
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Guest replied
Re: Email Style
Originally posted by Daisy
It depends. If informal and to a friend, yes. Written language is definitely changing due to computers. Obviously texting is an extreme example but the above example is showing more emotion than if written as recommeded by strunk. I see it as representing an extra layer of information and don't find it that grating in an informal setting.
I didn't find it grating at all. It was just an observation of one difference between the sexes. My wife (50ish) told me that she sends message like that all the time.
It depends. If informal and to a friend, yes. Written language is definitely changing due to computers. Obviously texting is an extreme example but the above example is showing more emotion than if written as recommeded by strunk. I see it as representing an extra layer of information and don't find it that grating in an informal setting.
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