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In their appearance and their mammerism?

2006-07-31 07:20:26 · 9 answers · asked by Jill B 2 in Social Science Gender Studies

9 answers

I don't think that. Men learn with age that most women don't want a man that spits, scratches, belches, farts, cusses, and brags about his equipment, car, money, fights, etc... They learn not to act like that around women. Do they loose their masculinity with age? No. But they learn about what women prefer to be around.
Women learn the same in reverse. Men don't want a woman that talks about nothing but hair, nails, shopping, make up, their periods, etc... So they learn to avoid the subjects around men.
As for looks, weight gain will soften the plans of a man's face to make him look "feminine". A woman might loose weight to harden the plans of hers, making her look more "masculine". Or sun damage to her skin that makes her skin look wrinkled and rough.

2006-07-31 08:05:47 · answer #1 · answered by welches_grape_jelly 6 · 1 2

I think we each become more of our true selves as we mature.

Hardly anyone is on the polar opposite ends of the feminine/masculine spectrum. We each lie somewhere along the way in the middle.

2006-07-31 07:31:05 · answer #2 · answered by bikerchickjill 5 · 0 1

No! Who ought to assert that Cary grant, Paul Newman, Robert de Niro, Al Pacino and many different non-celebrities grew to grow to be or grow to be female? interior a similar way, neither do we assume of of Katherine Hepburn, Marilyn Monroe, Susan Sarandan or Julia Roberts or different commonplace women that i comprehend are going any opposite direction! No way! Thank God for that!

2016-10-15 10:34:09 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No. Especially not in my family. The men are masculine when young, and are even more as they mature. The women are feminine when young, are are more as they mature.

I do not see why one sex would act more like the other with age.

2006-07-31 07:22:34 · answer #4 · answered by man_id_unknown 4 · 1 1

Not really in appearance, but yes in character. Men usually lose a bit of their drive to be "macho", and develop more empathic qualities. Women stop being soft meek flowery girly-girls, and start being more assertive. I think both sexes start subconsiously respecting the other more, and adopt some of their qualities.

2006-07-31 07:25:26 · answer #5 · answered by Christine T 2 · 1 1

Men and women are more alike than they are different. I think as people age, they drop pretense and thats's when you see the sameness, rather than the differences.

2006-08-01 15:57:54 · answer #6 · answered by Just Me 2 · 0 1

I think it just depends on the person and sometimes their surroundings.

2006-07-31 07:24:01 · answer #7 · answered by Sam 1 · 0 0

i doubt it

2006-07-31 07:23:51 · answer #8 · answered by quikboy 7 · 0 0

no

2006-07-31 07:23:30 · answer #9 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

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