Gender differences in verbal communication
There are two differences in the way a man and woman communicate and the differences are the languages styles that each gender uses and the non-verbal gestures that are communicated from their body stance and facial expressions. These gender communication differences are everywhere if you know enough about them to recognize them.
People are affected by their particular gender in every communication effort. The effort is prevalent and some can be pretty persuasive and done in a manner that neither gender is aware of when the action is put into force.
These unconscious actions are derived from a variety of background sources that we are exposed to in everyday life and use all of the mental sciences such as sociology principles and psychological interactions that are we perceive as pressures, that we pick up to relay in later communications with no thought or process behind it.
Not only are communication differences noted with gender differences in application, there are physical applications such as touch and movement that affect the reactions that we experience. People that are too close inside your personal space will receive more of an alarm response than those that communicate through calm expression, three feet away from you.
Women place emphasis on the end of sentences where men simply take the direct approach and comment on a subject to cover it thoroughly. There is a social issue at stake when noticing how the differences in gender communication are noted simply from the environment in which we are raised.
If you are a woman, then feeling comfortable about the discussion of the game of baseball or football would require experience with the games in the past to form a relation to the specific question you are being asked.
With slight knowledge of the rules and principles of both of the games, women can make conversation on the subject that could be perceived up to par with men who are saturated with it while growing up.
In reversing the role, if a man was tasked with talking about making a quilt, and the only background he had with them was the comfort they afford at night and not the sewing and piecing that were required to create it, the conversation would be very limited to say the least.
The non-verbal forms of gender difference are very verbal indeed. The stiffness in a woman’s back or the flaring of her nostrils are clear signs that a woman is angry and give ample warning to a perceptive man to give a great amount of distance to her while she calms down.
