The next time a guy tries to talk over you, take a cue from Nancy Pelosi.

In the process of trying to convince Donald Trump not to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi attended a dinner at the White House Wednesday. During this event, she experienced something women in politics are all too familiar with: manterrupting.

According to The Washington Post, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross at one point asked Pelosi, "What exactly does the President get out of this deal?" Pelosi tried to explain that Trump could reduce the hostility many Democrats currently harbor toward him over DACA—but she had some trouble making herself heard, as multiple men started talking.

She eventually got fed up and asked, "Do the women get to talk around here?"

The men reportedly quieted down after that, and though no deal was finalized, the group "agreed that the President would support enshrining DACA protections into law, and encourage the House and Senate to act," Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer said in a statement to The Hill.

If Pelosi's battle against manterrupters sounds all too common, well, it is. California Sen. Kamala Harris was interrupted twice earlier this year while questioning Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and Australian senator Penny Wong was repeatedly interrupted during a senate meeting in June. Despite there being only three female Supreme Court justices, two thirds of interruptions in court were directed toward one of them.

Female politicians face many other forms of sexism that contribute to an environment where their voices are deemed less important. Forty-four percent of female parliamentarians around the world said in a recent Inter-Parliamentary Union survey that they or their children had gotten death, rape, or kidnapping threats.

While clap backs like Pelosi's are commendable, it's worth pointing out that women shouldn't be put in situations where they have to either speak up or get spoken over in the first place.