Gender can be seen as an identity marker that is reflected in the language choice individuals make throughout interaction. This gender identity is interchangeable and can be taken as a context sensitive parameter that is affected by the interlocutors of any speech event. Shifting and changing language affiliations, experience and practice means that the multilingualism of a culture reflects a multi-layered identity construction each individual represents. Gender is considered to be one of the social components that shapes and redefines identity. When communicating, people, especially women, tend to shift their gender identities according to given requirements that a situation may demand. This may result in the existence of an extended range of identities a female speaker may reveal and represent through interaction that varies from a more masculine to a more feminine variety. Shifts by female speakers would require moving in the direction of adopting more masculine gender identity linguistic markers in situations where men are present. The shift of these gender identities also involves a shift in certain linguistic gender markers represented in the speech of female speakers, using some linguistic choices that may be close to a female or to a male conversational style. These gender identity markers that were investigated in this study were the involvement style developed by women, interruptions, and the turn-taking system along with a number of linguistic choices that signified each identity marker under investigation.