This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial 4.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The European Proceedings of Social & Behavioural Sciences eISSN: 2357-1330 icCSBs 2015 August The intonation in gender analysis of linguistics Zeine Orazbekova a ∗, Nazgul Shyngyssova b , Kulaiym Mamyrova b , Anarkhan Zhumabayeva b a Ablayhan 1\1,Kaskelen 040900, Kazakhstan, + 7 727 307 95 65 b Аl-Farabi,71, Almaty 050005, Kazakhstan, +7 (727) 377-33-30 Abstract Nowadays the disappearance of differences between female and male speech are often discussed. However, feminist-minded people approve such changes, considering this difference as inequality of the sexes. Nevertheless, it is impossible to state accurately that these developments will result in blurring the distinction between male and female speech. Women use more varied intonation patterns. They are characterized by exclamatory and interrogative intonation, which is pronounced by a rising tone. Such intonation is perceived as more emotional and friendly. Males, on the contrary, are marked by more smooth, downward intonation. Their speech is dominant and sounds more categorical and in confirming way. Such differences are associated with female emotionality, as well as stiffness and reticence of the men. The women tend to have a more standard pronunciation and because their social status is lower and evaluated on appearance and behavior, the women prefer prestigious forms of grammar. Investigations are being held on turning of the youth into mature men and women through social interactions, a family ideology, cultural educating, developing them are considered as results of the socialization process of the boys and girls. It has been investigated that housework are not divided equally between man and woman. It should be noted that recently the structural changes of a cultural gender are seem to be interesting (Orazbekova et al., 2014). ∗ Corresponding author. Tel.: +7 702 116 63 62, fax: +7 727 307 95 65 E-mail address: zeineoe@rambler.ru http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2015.08.3