Loud, raucous laughter with exaggerated movements and expressions is considered " unfeminine " in most cultures, and is much more common among men, particularly if they're with other men.
32.
It was all so unflattering-really unfeminine, long black skirts down to the floor and horrible jackets . " She also said in another interview that she hated black mini skirts she used to wear.
33.
Three of his detective stories had as an investigator Amy Brewster " a cigar-smoking, 300-pound lawyer-financier . . . Upper class but unfeminine " who solved mysteries for her friends.
34.
Renowned French comedian Josiane Balasko, who's married and has children, also wrote and directed the movie, and stars as the decidedly unfeminine Marijo, a role she said she modeled after several lesbian friends.
35.
Political spouses-- like children-- should be seen but not heard, especially when saying unfeminine things like " Shove it ! " Phrases like that reveal too much personality, something a political spouse must never possess.
36.
In an era when female athletes were discouraged from competing in sports because it was considered unfeminine, Pat McCormick was one of the first U . S . women to prove you can be married, have children and still compete.
37.
"The challenge is to find the masculine that can bend without being emasculated and the feminine that can be strong without becoming unfeminine, " she said, " and then somehow maintain that flexibility together ."
38.
American women were becoming _ casting votes, entering professions _ somehow convinced everyone that wanting to win might be OK for immigrants and working-class girls, but was unfeminine for nice, white, middle-class girls at elite schools.
39.
Others may have been raised with the belief that they should avoid unfeminine endeavors like competitive sports, but Aguirre, Delgado, Rodriguez and Solis grew up in San Antonio playing softball, volleyball and soccer with their fathers, brothers and sisters.
40.
Baker Brown's ideas were more accepted in the United States, where, from the 1860s, the operation was being used to cure hysteria, nymphomania, and in young girls what was called " rebellion " or " unfeminine aggression ".