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Where did the 'gay lisp' stereotype come from? | Science | AAAS
src: www.sciencemag.org

The gay lisp is a manner of speech associated with English-speaking gay men, involving sibilant consonants and, sometimes, other verbal features.

These attributes have proven difficult to define and quantify but seem somewhat independent of other variables in the phonology of the English language, such as accent and register. While not all gay males speak with the "gay lisp," perhaps fewer than half according to University of Toronto professor Henry Rogers, some studies have found when people listened to audio recordings of male speakers and were asked to identify their sexual orientation, their guesses were accurate at rates greater than chance. Two studies did find that a subset of gay men phonate /s/ distinctively; however, the way in which /s/ was pronounced--with a high peak frequency and a highly negatively skewed spectrum--made it more distinct from other similar sounds, rather than less. That is, this was arguably a hypercorrect /s/.


Video Gay lisp



Characteristics

Several speech features are stereotyped as markers of gay males: carefully enunciated pronunciation, wide pitch range (high and rapidly changing pitch,) breathy tone, lengthened fricative sounds, and pronunciation of /t/ as /ts/ and /d/ as /dz/ (affrication), etc. The "gay sound" of some gay men seems to some listeners to involve the characteristic pronunciation of sibilants (/s/, /z/, /?/), sometimes colloquially termed a "lisp", with noticeable assibilation, sibilation, hissing, or stridency.

Henry Rogers and colleague Ron Smyth investigated the phenomenon of English speakers often being able to identify gay speech patterns, of which they seemed to have identified a number of phonetic characteristics; in 62% of Rogers and Smyth's cases, listeners correctly identified gay speakers. A study at Stanford University involving a small sample group investigated claims that people can identify gay males by their speech and that these listeners use pitch range and fluctuation in deciding. Results were inconclusive, finding that listeners could distinguish gay from straight speech differences without narrowing down any "convincing empirical differences in pitch" between the two, which is representative of similar studies as well.

In a similar study of female speakers, it was found that listeners could not tell lesbian speakers from heterosexual speakers. Other studies of lesbian identity do make references to voice use by lesbians typically using lower pitch and more direct communication styles.


Maps Gay lisp



See also


Using AChecker to Test Web Accessibility - YouTube
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References


When my cousin was confused about coming out (Adventures in Gay ...
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Further reading

  • Crocker, L., & Munson, B. (2006). Speech Characteristics of Gender-Nonconforming Boys. Oral Presentation given at the Conference on New Ways of Analyzing Variation in Language, Columbus, OH.
  • Mack, S., & Munson, B. (2008). Implicit Processing, Social Stereotypes, and the 'Gay Lisp'. Oral presentation given at the annual meeting of the Linguistic Society of America, Chicago, IL.
  • Munson, B., & Zimmerman, L.J. (2006a). The Perception of Sexual Orientation, Masculinity, and Femininity in Formant-Resynthesized Speech. Oral Presentation given at the Conference on New Ways of Analyzing Variation in Language, Columbus, OH.

Voices: Gay, Straight, Girls, Guys and Anywhere In Between ...
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External links

  • Encyclopedia article on "gay speak"
  • Economist article on sounding gay
  • Beyond Lisping: Code Switching and Gay Speech Styles
  • Male voices and perceived sexual orientation: An experimental and theoretical approach

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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