• orclev@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Not generally, although “preachy” is. Saying females or women are mostly interchangeable, although using females in this case is an odd choice as there’s no real reason to pick that specific word. Generally you’d use female in a scientific or medical context where the biology in question is relevant (E.G. when talking about disease statistics or similar). Saying women would be a bit more inclusive but since he’s being an asshole anyway not sure a little extra inclusivity is going to make any difference.

      • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Generally speaking, using “females” instead of “women” is seen by women as an indicator you understand them as little as if they were a whole different species. The Ferengi accent is palpable.

        (Saying “female” as an adjective about women, especially in a scientific context, doesn’t have that connotation.)

        • Shou@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Adding to that. Most papers refer to their population as x amount of mem and women age bla bla. Females isn’t often used to describe humans. It’s just the internet trying to sound smart.

      • BirdEnjoyer@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Well, here he’s clearly using “Females” to be exclusive and offensive, demonstrating that the term does, in fact, have that potential, is my point.

        It is kinda nice when trying to figure out other cultures’ taboos, that you can get something as cut and dry as “this word or concept can show up in a news article when politicians misuse it.”
        Kinda intimidating, but also a useful frame of reference, because then there’s post like yours which specify that its context-specific.

        It can be really frustrating when you spend years tiptoeing around something, only to find out that the person you learned it from just had weird personal hangups or something.