Let's Talk About Singular They.

  Рет қаралды 892,076

K Klein

K Klein

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 13 000
@appa609
@appa609 2 жыл бұрын
pronouns don't need to exist
@youtubewontletmehaveaonewo2471
@youtubewontletmehaveaonewo2471 2 жыл бұрын
correct but they're useful its easier to say one word instead of always specifying what you're talking about i even used three pronouns in this comment
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
no more pronouns
@mx_ae
@mx_ae 2 жыл бұрын
let's all speak like UK roadmen and use the word "man" to replace 1st 2nd & 3rd person pronouns
@lukkamr
@lukkamr 2 жыл бұрын
me when pronouns 😡
@MrMineHeads.
@MrMineHeads. 2 жыл бұрын
@@youtubewontletmehaveaonewo2471 this person used a pronoun and now should be cancelled
@HlessthanBs
@HlessthanBs 2 жыл бұрын
Thinking back to when I did mock trial in highschool and our team was chastised by one of the judges for referring to a witness by the "Liberal pronoun 'they'"
@_blank-_
@_blank-_ 2 жыл бұрын
Hope he sentenced y'all to juvie
@grendy558
@grendy558 2 жыл бұрын
That's fucked up
@Toothily
@Toothily 2 жыл бұрын
Welp, conservatives getting tilted
@actualgoblin
@actualgoblin 2 жыл бұрын
i would be so embarrassed
@duane6386
@duane6386 2 жыл бұрын
Imagine if there were pronouns which indicated political ideology
@tealsummernights
@tealsummernights 2 жыл бұрын
It’s also fun to point out that singular they is older than singular you.
@mx_ae
@mx_ae 2 жыл бұрын
wha?
@isabellach
@isabellach 2 жыл бұрын
@@mx_ae yeah, people go on and say how new it is and don't care about you. Edit: you *pronouns* sorry. People do care about you
@mx_ae
@mx_ae 2 жыл бұрын
@@isabellach thanks for the edit I would have been very confused
@riccardozanoni2531
@riccardozanoni2531 2 жыл бұрын
@@isabellach 🤣that was amazing to read
@xcreeperbombx61
@xcreeperbombx61 2 жыл бұрын
@@mx_ae I think it was thou singular & you plural, which became thou informal & you formal, which became you always. Also makes it funny that people use thou formally when trying to sound old-timey.
@NoNo-xh7ru
@NoNo-xh7ru 2 жыл бұрын
I hate that I can say "they" in reference to a person of unspecified gender and people act like I'm making a statement on gender identify. What else am I supposed to say? "This individual of unspecified gender"? Not everything is political, some things are just convenient.
@Felipera_
@Felipera_ 2 жыл бұрын
It's even funnier when you are actually talking about someone you don't even know and people lash out at you.
@shadybat3183
@shadybat3183 2 жыл бұрын
@@jeremy5602 🤓
@cynicalradicand
@cynicalradicand 2 жыл бұрын
Plus it's almost certain they would subconsciously use singular "they" in their daily lives if they weren't thinking so hard about it.
@mysteriousluck
@mysteriousluck 2 жыл бұрын
@@shadybat3183 I've been seeing so many people replying to that guy, what did they say?? They deleted all of their comments with just replies remaining
@shockofthenew
@shockofthenew Жыл бұрын
​@@cynicalradicand Right? Imagine a transphobe sees someone left their bag behind after a meeting, I guess they're required to say something like "oh dear, someone left his or her bag here! I wonder if he or she noticed, I hope he or she comes back to get it. He or she probably left his or her wallet and phone and everything!" It's laughable. They make themselves look like idiots twisting in grammatical knots all to avoid accepting nonbinary people who're just living their lives.
@dented_riddles9967
@dented_riddles9967 Жыл бұрын
I don't have an opinion on the singular they, but I do think it's funny how often people accidentally use it when they're decrying its use.
@user-bz3kd2mt3u
@user-bz3kd2mt3u Жыл бұрын
It's one of my favorite types of transphobe self-own. Another fun one is that when you see a transphobe saying "WE CAN ALWAYS TELL," you can reply with a picture of a cis woman, imply she's a trans woman, and be like "you REALLY think she doesn't look like a woman?" and they'll rattle off like 5 ways that that CISGENDER WOMAN is obviously a man in a dress. Usually you want to choose a picture of a famous transphobe, because otherwise it's mean-but on at least one occasion I actually saw someone get tricked into doing it in response to a picture _of herself_
@IsaaacWithThreeA
@IsaaacWithThreeA Жыл бұрын
@@user-bz3kd2mt3u A picture of HERSELF? Is she hiding something?
@keit99
@keit99 Жыл бұрын
What how does someone not recognize an image of themselves 😂
@keit99
@keit99 Жыл бұрын
I wish german had an equivalent of Singular 'they'. If you don't know someone's gender, you could then use that instead of "er oder sie"
@clarimp
@clarimp Жыл бұрын
@@keit99 Doesn't german have "es"? Is it only for things?
@kahlilbt
@kahlilbt 2 жыл бұрын
There are even times when we use singular they for people of known gender. If I have a couple girl friends over and afterwards I find a handbag on my couch, I think it's way more natural to say, "Someone left their purse." than "Someone left her purse." Both are correct but one sounds more natural to me.
@stm7810
@stm7810 2 жыл бұрын
Good example and congrats on your poly relationship! or friendship if you meant friends who are girls rather than girls you are in intimate relationships with.
@Komet212
@Komet212 2 жыл бұрын
Well, you don't really think about people's gender. You just use this phrase automatically.
@zapazap
@zapazap 2 жыл бұрын
@@stm7810 Why does having friends who are girls make one 'poly' in any sense? Cheers! :)
@stm7810
@stm7810 2 жыл бұрын
@@zapazap Girlfriends, in current casual language means people with feminine genders who you are romantically or sexually involved with. I just also acknowledged the other meaning it could be.
@zapazap
@zapazap 2 жыл бұрын
@@stm7810 That use is common in my circles when the speaker is a man. Otherwise, the implication is merely friendship, esp when the plural is used. YMMV. Cheers! :)
@UberMenschNowFilms
@UberMenschNowFilms 2 жыл бұрын
I've always used "they" in the singular when referring to a person I don't know the gender of because saying "he or she" is clunky. No one cared until language became another front in the culture war. Many people started getting pedantic over that usage of "they" all of a sudden. Me thinks that many of them don't genuinely care about grammatical rules.
@basementdustproductions1069
@basementdustproductions1069 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. I really don’t get why people spend extra time writing “he/she”when you can literally just write they
@ClownlyChuckles
@ClownlyChuckles 2 жыл бұрын
Using ineffective communication to own the libs or something.
@honkhonk1712
@honkhonk1712 2 жыл бұрын
Same... if idk their gender I use they
@595no
@595no 2 жыл бұрын
And that's why I intentionally use "He" every single time. If those people don't care, why would I or any of the normal ones?
@samisphere_
@samisphere_ 2 жыл бұрын
@@595no that’s worse
@riri-bl8jk
@riri-bl8jk 2 жыл бұрын
As a Japanese speaker, I envy English for having a practical epicene/singular/animate/3rd person pronoun. (Technically we also had an epicene pronoun in history, but it shifted to masculine when translators imported gendered pronouns.)
@0th_Law
@0th_Law 2 жыл бұрын
*Oof*
@no.7893
@no.7893 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I'm a 日本語 learner and I've wondered for ages if there really is a non gendered way to refer to a person in japanese but I guess in the case where 彼 and 彼女 can't work あの/その/この人 works as well。。。I'm curious what the epicene pronoun that took on masculinity is?
@TheGreatBackUpVIDEOS
@TheGreatBackUpVIDEOS 2 жыл бұрын
As a learner who translates as practice, it's DEFINITELY weird but doesn't Japanese avoid pronouns anyway? Honestly, it feels like a completely new problem where instead of having nobody agree on the right way to gender, gendering at all is the weird thing.
@magicalgirlnicole
@magicalgirlnicole 2 жыл бұрын
@@no.7893 Originally 彼 was epicene until translators of European literature needed a way to differentiate "he" and "she", resulting in the creation of 彼女 as a feminine pronoun towards the end of the 19th century, and 彼 shifting to masculine.
@andrasfogarasi5014
@andrasfogarasi5014 2 жыл бұрын
There is nothing stopping you from speaking like a nerd and using archaic Japanese.
@phillippenna5558
@phillippenna5558 8 ай бұрын
A verb walks into a bar, sees a beautiful noun, and suggests they conjugate. The noun declines.
@lev7509
@lev7509 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this X3
@JustinJonesLi
@JustinJonesLi 2 жыл бұрын
Minor correction: singular they is not necessarily used in the case of unknown gender but for *unspecified* gender (including cases where the lack of specification is due to lack of knowledge). For example, consider "I have a close friend who went to medical school, and they told me not to make the same mistake". It's more likely that I'm choosing not to reveal my friend's gender than it is that I simply don't know it
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
or there's actually proximity or adherence to a semantic plural, but that's a different case altogether
@jaydabomb2510
@jaydabomb2510 2 жыл бұрын
So maybe if we start thinking it as unspecified gender rather than unknown, it could come across easier for some people to get a grasp. Because that makes sense to me. Saying you are unspecified so you don’t have to feel pressured to be any gender and not feel like they’re nothing. Unless if that’s what they want.
@ARACHNIDPARTY
@ARACHNIDPARTY 2 жыл бұрын
@@jaydabomb2510 yeah this is a great way to start bridging the gap between people who aren’t used to consciously using singular they/them!! i’m going to use this next time, thanks :)
@JustinJonesLi
@JustinJonesLi 2 жыл бұрын
@@jaydabomb2510I agree with you, and it's a big part of why I like to bring people's attention to it. Without singular they, gender is almost mandatory in English. People think they're entitled to know everyone's gender, even when identities are meant to be kept confidential but are still "known" to someone. And yes, there's a variety of reasons why people want to use singular they for themselves. It could be they are questioning their gender or the pronoun best reflects their gender. I think the fewer assumptions we make, the better
@exist4046
@exist4046 2 жыл бұрын
@@JustinJonesLi for me half of it is being nonbinary and the other half is that the "th" sound is far less triggering to my sensory issues as compared to the "sh" sound, which a lot of older people seem to almost put emphasis on too depending on their accents. Also, people seem to spit far more when making the "sh" sound and I've literally been spat on before, and the pronoun "she" always sounds so damn /loud/ to me. The "ay" sound also is just far better to me than the "ee" sound. So it's a combo of myself not wanting to be automatically called a woman and also me just fucking hating "she" as a pronounced sound
@raidriar01
@raidriar01 2 жыл бұрын
We should just combine all the major pronouns into “shit” (She, he, it) it would make English class a hell of a lot funnier
@hirilyss
@hirilyss 2 жыл бұрын
This. This is amazing I want this
@finnmusicstuff
@finnmusicstuff 2 жыл бұрын
you're so real for this
@Goofyguy23709
@Goofyguy23709 2 жыл бұрын
Best comment, i love it
@alienrat-z3g
@alienrat-z3g 2 жыл бұрын
I NEED that
@wezreplex0
@wezreplex0 2 жыл бұрын
Shit/Shitself
@dws49
@dws49 2 жыл бұрын
For a second I figured "thon/thonself" sounded metal as fuck, until I realized thon is the french word for tuna
@ma-am-thats-a-crescent-roll
@ma-am-thats-a-crescent-roll 2 жыл бұрын
I don't understand how that's not metal, in fact, that makes it more metal. Don't you wanna be called tuna? Don't you wanna call other people tuna? Tuna supremacy.
@nestorv7627
@nestorv7627 2 жыл бұрын
Lmaoooo
@Pablo_Martin_aa
@Pablo_Martin_aa 2 жыл бұрын
Tuna
@arandomsupra
@arandomsupra 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly I would just ignore french they call water "eau" and its pronounced "ö"
@swagmoneybuge
@swagmoneybuge Жыл бұрын
"thon" doesn't sound metal, it sounds like something you scoop salad with.
@Gensys0
@Gensys0 Жыл бұрын
You don't know how envious I as a German am of your 'they'. So neutral, so beautiful.
@RobespierreThePoof
@RobespierreThePoof Жыл бұрын
Die deutsches "der/die/das" gefällt mir viel besser. Alles ist immer so klar. Im Englischen gibt es so viele Sätze, in denen nicht klar ist, was der Gegenstand des Pronomens ist. Hier gibt es ein Satz: "Suzanne went to the grocery store and pharmacy to buy bananas and condoms. She used them up before she even got home!" Now, just WHAT has Suzanne been up to! DId she eat all the bananas? Or did she .. ummm ... use all the condoms on her walk home!? Aber auf Deutsch braucht Suzanne ihre Sexualmoral nicht zu verteidigen. Alles ist klar: "Suzanne ist zum Lebensmittelladen und zur Apotheke gegangen. Sie kauft ein paar Bananen und eine Schachtel Kondome. Sie hat sie aufgebraucht, bevor sie überhaupt nach Hause kam!“ Ja, es ist ganz sicher was Suzanne hat gemacht!😅🤣
@axain7784
@axain7784 Жыл бұрын
Look up the word "Thon". Much better by a landslide in terms of using it for people.
@th0rrrrr
@th0rrrrr Жыл бұрын
@@RobespierreThePoof that doesn't even make sense? How would translating this into German make it more clear? Because I'm a German native speaker who just translated this in his head and it changed nothing. (also der/die/das (articles) has nothing to do with the singular they (pronoun)!
@wullivieh
@wullivieh Жыл бұрын
@@RobespierreThePoof As a German, nope, not clear at all just from the "sie". Like the "aufgebraucht" is more of an indicator than the "sie"?
@omg.mesohungry
@omg.mesohungry Жыл бұрын
How's the Gender Star treating you guys? Has it butchered your once beautiful language yet?
@RoninOwin1738
@RoninOwin1738 2 жыл бұрын
Saying “Someone left their bike here” Feels natural. I’ve never heard anyone say “Someone left his or her bike here”
@Liggliluff
@Liggliluff Жыл бұрын
"A person left the bike here, that belongs to said person"
@moonlink727
@moonlink727 Жыл бұрын
they can be used for a person you don't know the gender of, like if you see someone online and don't know their gender, you can use they.
@eleternauta2640
@eleternauta2640 Жыл бұрын
Sounds a non english speaker would say
@moonlink727
@moonlink727 Жыл бұрын
@@eleternauta2640 What's wrong with not speaking english?
@tigerguy529
@tigerguy529 Жыл бұрын
@@moonlink727 so... you're still using they/them to refer to a singular person. You can't argue they/them is only used for plural and then use it singularly when the gender is unknown. That's contradictory.
@Abd121
@Abd121 2 жыл бұрын
As an English teacher, it's been almost my life's mission to reclaim the legitimacy of Singular they! I've genuinely had fights with district managers who wanted me to not talk about it in fear of some parent thinking I'm teaching kids about "twitter pronouns"
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
good stuff, I wish you luck out there
@yoavco99
@yoavco99 2 жыл бұрын
Comparing it to twitter pronouns is absurd
@ellie8272
@ellie8272 2 жыл бұрын
You're a hero :)
@_blank-_
@_blank-_ 2 жыл бұрын
Based district managers.
@morreamanha
@morreamanha 2 жыл бұрын
@@_blank-_ yes, they're based in bulshit
@Safesi1509
@Safesi1509 2 жыл бұрын
If people think pronouns are confusing wait until you hear about... Verbs.
@luckycharms_
@luckycharms_ Жыл бұрын
What is a verb!!! I've only heard about these gosh darn pronouns😡
@iampancak3
@iampancak3 Жыл бұрын
@@luckycharms_ 😂
@luckycharms_
@luckycharms_ Жыл бұрын
@@iampancak3 ur username is cool but I like waffles😔💔
@iampancak3
@iampancak3 Жыл бұрын
@@luckycharms_ I'm a traitor to my own kind, I also like waffles 😭
@the_demon149
@the_demon149 Жыл бұрын
Exactly! People say pronouns are confusing… it’s like they don’t even know what prepositions are! (They probably don’t.)
@moana_nui
@moana_nui Жыл бұрын
my māori teacher once marked us wrong because we answered they instead of he/she when translating ia (A GENDER NEUTRAL PRONOUN). So on the next test we answered he/she/zer/fae/er/it/pae/ver. She never marked us wrong again.
@angeldude101
@angeldude101 Жыл бұрын
Gotta be inclusive to those faeries you know? XD
@rainboSnails
@rainboSnails Жыл бұрын
@@angeldude101 fae/faem r actual neopronouns that r pretty popular :D
@angeldude101
@angeldude101 Жыл бұрын
@@rainboSnails (I thought it was fae/faer) I know. It's just that it was the only noun-self pronoun on the list (which does make sense since it is _the_ most popular among the noun-self pronouns.) There's also _really_ interesting history linking the fae with the kind of people most likely to use neopronouns like that in the first place. (It's not as pretty as it might sound.)
@halfpintrr
@halfpintrr Жыл бұрын
@@angeldude101 I never understood why faerie was used as an insult here. Is it because faeries are of the ‘devil’ in old Christian myth?
@haotatyan
@haotatyan Жыл бұрын
Same bro my teached marks me wrong
@graydhd8688
@graydhd8688 Жыл бұрын
Without pronouns, what would amateur nouns have left to strive for?
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN Жыл бұрын
nice pfp
@RosheenQuynh
@RosheenQuynh Жыл бұрын
HA!
@ecogreen123
@ecogreen123 Жыл бұрын
agreed
@laika5707
@laika5707 Жыл бұрын
Esports version of nouns
@michael_nagik
@michael_nagik Жыл бұрын
the antinouns seeing this comment:
@kaet8333
@kaet8333 2 жыл бұрын
To me, this way of doing things is just so convenient, the words for human and person are gendered in my language, so not having to go around it seems like a no brainer. Just use they and be done with it
@SingingSealRiana
@SingingSealRiana 2 жыл бұрын
Agree, since I got comfortable communicating in English, the forced gendering of my mother tongue annoys me to no ends. Like I am not against having gendered pronouns too, sometimes gender and or sex do matter, but not nearly as often as one is lead to belive. English has pretty much the perfect balance between inclusivity and specivity in that regard. It allows say mum or dad, but also parent in singular. If I can not tell someone's gender/sex, simply using they, easy as that.
@badgerfern6469
@badgerfern6469 2 жыл бұрын
Right, why bother using he/she when you can use they?
@SingingSealRiana
@SingingSealRiana 2 жыл бұрын
@@badgerfern6469 depends on what you mean, using he or she, or using he/she, the later is indeed stupid, for the former there are arguments if in addition to they.
@kitedflorn
@kitedflorn Жыл бұрын
Once, I got really high marks for an english examination and one of the mistakes I made was using “they” instead of “he” “she” for a person whose gender I don’t know.
@themagicfarawaytree21
@themagicfarawaytree21 Жыл бұрын
Wow. I hate English teachers
@iris_drawssandwiches
@iris_drawssandwiches Жыл бұрын
Eh just start using thon or something.
@miglek9613
@miglek9613 Жыл бұрын
@@iris_drawssandwiches you'd be shocked at how adamant the examination systems of entire countries are on excluding people, as well as anything that is not basic 1950s british english
@strawbaerae
@strawbaerae Жыл бұрын
oh i used to get marks cut for that too :/ everytime i need to use it on a test now i very begrudgingly use 'she or he' just so i can get my marks TT it's annoying, makes sentences sound much more clunky too
@miglek9613
@miglek9613 Жыл бұрын
@@strawbaerae not a perfect solution as it sounds incredibly impersonal but I use "one" instead of singular "they" in essays and that is considered gramatically correct in my country's english exams
@Link9058
@Link9058 8 ай бұрын
I remember that Turkish has literally 1 third person pronoun. For everything. And they get along just fine because context exists
@mulayimbozkurt9693
@mulayimbozkurt9693 7 ай бұрын
Not exactly. Turkish language has 1 third person singular pronoun which is "o".
@StomachAcid
@StomachAcid 5 ай бұрын
Well, as far as I know, they have one pronoun for he, she, and it. They still have other pronouns like I, you, we, and they. There’s actually a formal and informal way to say you. The formal way is also used if you’re addressing multiple people. It’s such a cool language!
@heybak
@heybak 5 ай бұрын
As a Turkish person who lives in Türkiye, I can confirm everything above is true. "O" really is useful
@StomachAcid
@StomachAcid 5 ай бұрын
@@heybak That’s really cool! I’m not Turkish but I also like that pronoun very much.
@rubenvanderark4960
@rubenvanderark4960 4 ай бұрын
Toki Pona has First person (any gender, any amount, any form) Second person (any gender, any amount, any form) Third person (any gender, any amount, any form) And it all works very intuitively.
@Bee_v0mit
@Bee_v0mit Жыл бұрын
I study linguistics. Trust me this is probably the easiest part of the English language to get your head around.
@Xenomnipotent
@Xenomnipotent Жыл бұрын
Not for right wingers apparently, must be a brain issue I suppose
@Immadeus
@Immadeus Жыл бұрын
Least confusing English grammar rule
@thatsawesomeithink
@thatsawesomeithink Жыл бұрын
@TMVGemini24 (Pee) you rude.
@RealMrHater
@RealMrHater Жыл бұрын
@@thatsawesomeithink and you proved a point
@thatsawesomeithink
@thatsawesomeithink Жыл бұрын
@@RealMrHater glad someone noticed 😁
@sailorenthusiast
@sailorenthusiast 2 жыл бұрын
Oh man. I remember taking a business English class, and an entire portion of the class was dedicated to reinforcing the idea that the singular they wasn’t grammatically correct, and that I should use “he or she” instead. I cringed the entire time, as it felt very politically motivated, with little regard to how clunky it would sound to reject the singular they as a grammatical concept. To this day, I shall continue using singular they, both because it’s more natural to me, and because of spite against that class for insisting otherwise.
@DinosaurNick
@DinosaurNick 2 жыл бұрын
I would totally write an entire essay on purpose both using, supporting, and explaining singular 'they' just to piss off the teacher
@jjQlLlLq
@jjQlLlLq 2 жыл бұрын
What in the world… The usage's been there since way back tho, what the heck people lmao Are they non-natives? You should show this video to them lol
@Bob-bs9ok
@Bob-bs9ok 2 жыл бұрын
It probably was politially motivated
@evilturkey523
@evilturkey523 2 жыл бұрын
the same thing happened to me in my english class but I was young and naive so I believed the teacher when she told us it was grammatically incorrect so I used "he or she" in essays for like the next 2 years even though I didn't like how it sounded, just because I thought it was right
@Andreaa_-_
@Andreaa_-_ 2 жыл бұрын
If they see a wallet on the floor do they just go like " oh no, he or she lost his or her wallet!"
@michaelweiske702
@michaelweiske702 2 жыл бұрын
I remember back in middle school, they gave everyone a grammar test where we filled in the blanks of sentences to make sense grammatically. There was a sentence where the subject had unknown gender, something like "someone left the classroom, and _____ went down the hall" (probably not exact since this was almost a decade ago at this point), and I used "they" because, well, it sounded the most correct, but nope the answer was he/she. Good to have some confirmation that I was correct all along.
@NotFine
@NotFine 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, he/she is just a mouthful They is just more natural
@zapazap
@zapazap 2 жыл бұрын
Insufficiently inclusive. I suggest 'she/he/it'. (Contractable to 's/h/it').
@exotic1405
@exotic1405 2 жыл бұрын
@@zapazap haha fecal matter
@zapazap
@zapazap 2 жыл бұрын
@@exotic1405 Oh, my!
@ihappydawnz
@ihappydawnz 2 жыл бұрын
engineer gaming
@mayfielcl
@mayfielcl Жыл бұрын
I am french and when we were like 8 our teacher told us about « ils » being masculine but used for women too even if there are 1 man and 100 women we GASPED🤣
@globingoblin
@globingoblin Жыл бұрын
Same in Spanish, awful
@Bjlogna
@Bjlogna Жыл бұрын
yeah, i'm learning french and the gender rules can be pretty confusing. i know that some people have been using iel as the epicine singular but idk if iels has caught on yet
@nhasirduck3500
@nhasirduck3500 Жыл бұрын
I remember being taught the exact same thing, with the exact same example lol
@xylophone_888
@xylophone_888 Жыл бұрын
it's similar in russian, if there's a man in a group of two people you have to say "оба" (masculine both) instead of "обе" (feminine both) to me that never felt right though so i just use "обои" in everyday speech which technically translates to wallpaper and is grammatically incorrect but is not gendered at least lmao
@SCP-173peanut
@SCP-173peanut Жыл бұрын
@@globingoblin why is It awful
@martinschmid797
@martinschmid797 2 жыл бұрын
In german, "someone" goes with he and "person" goes with she. I remember, back when we were teen boys some people would mock you when you used the generic male while talking about love/dating ("oh, are you gay?"), resulting in some people ungrammatically using the female where a generic male was needed. I think that beautifully shows that even after hundreds of years with a generic he in the german language, it still conjures up the image of a man. And somewhat ironically, the fear of sounding gay resulted in a more inclusive (albeit ungrammatical) use of language in a group of teen boys.
@thesleepydot
@thesleepydot 2 жыл бұрын
how ironic... homohobia led to inclusivity... lol
@クイン-e8l
@クイン-e8l 2 жыл бұрын
It’s kinda like that in Spanish…persona is feminine and humano is masc
@-mmm-kay7980
@-mmm-kay7980 2 жыл бұрын
Es macht lich so traurig das man sich überhaupt über they/them lustig macht im Deutschen, obwohl wir "Sie" haben was ein equivalent zu 'they'. Klar Neutrale Pronomen gibt es nicht wirklich aber man kann ja bald was finden & eventuell in der Vergangenheit suchen :)
@martinschmid797
@martinschmid797 2 жыл бұрын
@@-mmm-kay7980 Ich bin da nicht so optimistisch. Sprache entwickelt sich nur von der Mehrheit aus natürlich. Die verschiedenen progressiven Strömungen sind nicht geeint genug, wodurch keine massentauglichen Neopronomen entstehen können. Stattdessen gibt es unzählige Varianten und Ideen, welche sich alle gegenseitig behindern.
@-mmm-kay7980
@-mmm-kay7980 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinschmid797 Leider muss ich dir recht geben, mit denn viele Neopronomen wie Xier/xem, ;Dey/Dem; Sier/Siem; etc kann man echt schnell denn Überblick verlieren. Am klügsten wäre die Neopronomen Dey/Dem, meiner Meinung nach, am besten da sie vom englischen ableiten kann. Klar wird das eine Umstellung sein, dennoch hoffe ich das es genug Menschen gibt die sich einigen können. Nach dem Gendern Debakel kann man es wahrscheinlich in naher Zukunft streichen. Wenn so viele Menschen jetzt schon ein Problem haben, kann ich nur schwarz sehen für alle Transgender ppl. Was meinst du?
@hcos8139
@hcos8139 2 жыл бұрын
"PeOpLe ARe MakINg NeW PronOunCe NoW" people in 1858: t h o n
@Magyar_patriot
@Magyar_patriot 2 жыл бұрын
1 mentally insane person*
@arandomsupra
@arandomsupra 2 жыл бұрын
**Makes random letter with complex set of rules for when to use it for no reason at all**
@TenositSergeich
@TenositSergeich Жыл бұрын
"he" - associated with having facial hair "T H O N" - powerful consonant - deep vowel - pronounced like impending doom manifesting at once - personal pronoun you want to use for a sapient monolith
@L0rdOfThePies
@L0rdOfThePies Жыл бұрын
@@TenositSergeich you make a good point, added to my vocabulary and list of pronouns
@viceconsulimhotepienenobed1573
@viceconsulimhotepienenobed1573 Жыл бұрын
@@TenositSergeich I now know how to corectly refere to sentient monolyths. Thon is also the French for thuna.
@rimakazoku9243
@rimakazoku9243 Жыл бұрын
All of my English teachers throughout my life never had an issue with singular “they”. Matter of fact, I never even knew people were throwing a fit over it until Twitter. We’ve been using it since FOREVER, why is it suddenly so contentious? Were people never taught this? 😭💀
@iqbalindaryono8984
@iqbalindaryono8984 Жыл бұрын
Probably not, as a non-native speaker, I've always known that "they/them" is plural. It's just less confusing to use "he/she" than "they/them" as the latter requires context in order for it to make sense. "He/She ate some food." can only be interpreted as someone eating food. Whereas; "They ate some food." can be interpreted as a group or, within this context, as someone eating food. At this point we might as well make a new word for it. If "tryna" is a thing, then a gender neutral pronoun can be a thing.
@lxvrrbxy
@lxvrrbxy Жыл бұрын
@@iqbalindaryono8984 english is my 1st language and singular they has always been used, even before the twitter fiasco about the topic started we don't need to create a entirely new pronoun because people are now upset of they being used in such a way it is not hard to interpret a single person when using they - "they left their wallet on the counter", "they left the party on their own accord", "they were all by themself", etc. it has always been like this, people are just now upset because queerness has been attached to using singular they
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN Жыл бұрын
"why is it suddenly so contentious?" in short, the answer is conservative moral panic over trans and nonbinary people.
@ganymedehedgehog371
@ganymedehedgehog371 Жыл бұрын
@@lxvrrbxy your second example could actually be plural. Technically even example 1 could be too if for a particular occasion 2 people just had one wallet between them. I mostly use they, but you can’t the fact that it can often be confusing whether it is plural or singular. “They” has grammatical issues, but it’s better to sort out the optimal way to use it than make a new pronoun or something.
@antares3030
@antares3030 Жыл бұрын
Non-native here They've only taught us he/she/it in school, so it was weird using 'they' as singular pronoun at 1st, but I got used to it quickly I assume most of the people throwing tantrum about it are non-natives who are extremely unaware In my language for example there is no equivalent for singular 'they'. There are only binary pronouns. Like, that whole state of existence is just absent from your mind until you get into English-speaking community. You can't even translate it correctly, you can use the plural version of 'they' but it sounds so wrong, it's funny And people are usually hesitant to shift their paradigm when it doesn't immediately benefit them
@Derf1OO
@Derf1OO 9 ай бұрын
Looking at recent comments on this video is a hell of ride. I don’t know what I expected.
@epiclemon9927
@epiclemon9927 9 ай бұрын
sorting youtube comments by newest first is a 100% effective way to reduce the amount of brain cells you have
@Walleyedwosaik
@Walleyedwosaik 8 ай бұрын
@@epiclemon9927TRUEEE
@efce
@efce 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great idea
@Derf1OO
@Derf1OO 3 ай бұрын
@@efce You’ve made a terrible mistake. I’ve seen some of the trash you’ve decided to sift through.
@tarostartic8833
@tarostartic8833 2 жыл бұрын
i vividly recall that my literature teacher deducted marks for using singular they;;; lmao only two years later, my linguistics teacher was actively using it in her classes. pretty safe to say which teacher i preferred
@evilgoose6768
@evilgoose6768 2 жыл бұрын
that's so dumb. Singular they has been used since Shakespeare and has always been grammatically correct. Your literature was just outright wrong
@GimOA
@GimOA 2 жыл бұрын
@@evilgoose6768 that was hyperbolic, humans do make mistake from time to time.
@environmentaly7894
@environmentaly7894 Жыл бұрын
@@GimOA i feel like it was feelings over facts 😶 like the teacher was so biased with his political view that he pushed it onto his teaching and grading.
@EvanOfTheDarkness
@EvanOfTheDarkness Жыл бұрын
@@evilgoose6768 Literature is frequently grammatically incorrect. Some because it was written before English grammar was finalized, others because Artists have the freedom to use grammar as they see fit.
@major7thsharp11
@major7thsharp11 Жыл бұрын
@@EvanOfTheDarkness That's not how any of that works lmao
@ultimatehusky5481
@ultimatehusky5481 2 жыл бұрын
I love the "But none of these pronouns have caught on... *yet*." It's so vaguely threatening. Hilarious and amazing.
@Qrtuop
@Qrtuop 2 жыл бұрын
You find threats amusing?
@blueoqua7394
@blueoqua7394 2 жыл бұрын
@@Qrtuop 🤓
@lemonofcake
@lemonofcake 2 жыл бұрын
@@Qrtuop 🤓
@MITOCHONDRlA
@MITOCHONDRlA 2 жыл бұрын
@@Qrtuop somites, threats are not always agressive.
@MITOCHONDRlA
@MITOCHONDRlA 2 жыл бұрын
Also anyone replying with nerd emoji just can't explain their thoughts fr
@catoticneutral
@catoticneutral 2 жыл бұрын
the plural pronoun "y'all" is probably one of the best things to come out of Texas
@treesspeaklatin8950
@treesspeaklatin8950 Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@cheesusabidas77
@cheesusabidas77 Жыл бұрын
i thought Scott the woz invented it
@cheesusabidas77
@cheesusabidas77 Жыл бұрын
@@Carbonara_17 yes
@lemonhscott7667
@lemonhscott7667 Жыл бұрын
I thought y’all was singular and all’y’all was plural
@catoticneutral
@catoticneutral Жыл бұрын
@@lemonhscott7667 You are incorrect. "Y'all" is a conjugation of "You all" so it's inherently plural. "All'y'all" is a conjugation of "All of you all" which is redundant but also feels correct to say sometimes.
@gothcsm
@gothcsm Жыл бұрын
whenever people try to tell me they/them cannot be singular I alr know their english teachers hated them 💀
@Dor_27
@Dor_27 Жыл бұрын
(They're) the kid the teacher called on in class to do a reading just to watch (them) struggle over it. Every English teacher I had did that.
@thatonearanara
@thatonearanara Жыл бұрын
They’re the kid who the teacher has to say the word that they are reading because it took them too long trying to understand a word like cumbersome.
@samuraijosh1595
@samuraijosh1595 Жыл бұрын
they for unspecified geneder is ok. they for made up genders is not ok
@ermazargw3908
@ermazargw3908 Жыл бұрын
It can't be singular if you KNOW the gender of the person you're referring to.
@gothcsm
@gothcsm Жыл бұрын
@@ermazargw3908 Yes… it can 💀
@ArtIsHuman
@ArtIsHuman Жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: about a hundred years ago Chinese only used gender neutral pronouns. They used to only have one word to refer to someone in the third person, it was 他 (other than 它, which more or less means "it"). But later as China and English speaking countries started to communicate more, for some reason they felt the need for gendered pronouns for translations. So they added the character 她 to mean "she" and 他 was now "he". But for pronouns referring to a group of mixed genders they still used the original 他 character as a root. And one more bonus fact: 他 uses to root character 人, which means human, and 她 uses the root character 女 which means woman. The person who first started to use 她 was originally criticized for the choice as it took human out of the word "she". Bonus bonus fact: non-binary Chinese speakers now most often use X也 or TA as their pronouns. The frist pronoun follows the solution often used when there isn't a gender less word in your language. And the second is the pinyin (frenetic pronunciation) of all 他,她,and 它. They are all pronounced exactly the same. So ya.... that was fun. I don't think anyone will read this though. Have a good day.
@fxirytxxth3332
@fxirytxxth3332 Жыл бұрын
I am China pronouns 100 years ago
@cyncynshop
@cyncynshop Жыл бұрын
The worst thing about adding 女 to 也 is that multiple words with negative meaning also use the 女 word in combination, words like 奸 and 奴.
@ArtIsHuman
@ArtIsHuman Жыл бұрын
@@cyncynshop Yes, China has historically not been the best when it comes to women's rights.
@cihloun
@cihloun Жыл бұрын
At lease chinese used it
@ivanwong1968
@ivanwong1968 Жыл бұрын
As Chinese myself, I'd rather people call me a chink than calling x this x that. It's utterly bullshit and confusing.
@slyar
@slyar 2 жыл бұрын
"None of these have caught on... *yet* " The neopronoun takeover of September 2035 mark my words
@_blank-_
@_blank-_ 2 жыл бұрын
Putin if you hear me, please push the button 🙏💥
@atbing2425
@atbing2425 2 жыл бұрын
If it's not broken, why try and fix it.
@actualgoblin
@actualgoblin 2 жыл бұрын
@@atbing2425 idk i think neopronouns are funny
@frimi8593
@frimi8593 2 жыл бұрын
@@atbing2425 personally this was actually the first time I’d heard of “thon” specifically. And even if it doesn’t come into general usage as a neutrally gendered term, I actually really like the idea of having a “the one” contraction since the existing epicene pronoun “one” (with regard to how I tend to use it anyway) is already very convenient when referring to general populations, for example, “one must have food, water, and shelter in order to survive.”
@angelikaskoroszyn8495
@angelikaskoroszyn8495 2 жыл бұрын
I've read once a fanfic with neopronouns. The author just added them into the story without any explanation or context. The reader has to assume that in this alternative universe the existence of non-binary people is so normalized that giving any exposition would be ridiculous Like when you read a normal novel nobody explains to you what does she/her mean and what does it mean to be a woman. Similarly I was "forced" by the fanfic to accept non-binary as normal It was surprisingly refreshing. The author didn't treat me like a child who needs to be lead by a hand Maybe that's the future that awaites us. Well, as a person who studies in Poland I already have a taste of the potential mess. So when I talk to a lecturer I have to use different honorifics depending on their degree +3rd person. If I forgot them I would piss them off. And of course there's no outside indicator which would help me guessing which honorific I should use - I have to remember them all. Not a good system. Unsurprisingly younger lecturers prefer more general mr. or ms. Simplicity is important in language so I think that if neopronouns ever ended up in standard English then there would be one dominant while others would be ignored. Not out of malice but because the variety of pronouns would kinda ruin their usefulness
@FullMetalFeline
@FullMetalFeline 2 жыл бұрын
Im a writer and have sexless/genderless aliens in one of my works as central characters. Singular 'they' was the only option for them. I was worried this might be considered ungramatical by the reader and it didnt feel quite right when I started using it, but Im now so used to it it feels completely natural. My only gripe is that it can definitely be confused with the plural form. In my example, I have muliple characters who take this pronoun and they travel in a group, as such, in some instances I have to use descriptors instead of pronouns to avoid confusion. The singular they isnt as flexible as other pronouns in this regard. I think we're very lucky to have a word available to use in English even if not perfect though, but it would be nice if in the future a distinction between singular and plural could evolve for ease of use.
@PeridotBee
@PeridotBee 2 жыл бұрын
When writing nonbinary characters I just clarify the person or group I'm talking about every time it switches, it is quite similar to to just using more than one character of a masculine or feminine gender for example you could say something like "All the aliens cimbed into the disk shaped ship and took off, the loud rumbling leading all on board to wonder if they were being followed. Back on [insert planet name here] [character name] sat alone in the sand, they had been assigned the role of staying back to watch the children, and making sure that the children wouldn't kill one another. [character name] smiled at the children, their eyes filled with sand the ship had blown in their face."
@stego-
@stego- 2 жыл бұрын
i personally use “it” due to aliens not being humans or born in earth at all. it nudges them being “different”, and will be contrasted via emotions in your writing.
@emarceeqem4715
@emarceeqem4715 2 жыл бұрын
@@stego- It is pretty depersonifying though, and may not be what the author is going for.
@stego-
@stego- 2 жыл бұрын
@@emarceeqem4715 its an alien. they aren’t human. and you should show that. despite “It” being degrading, it also causes uncertainty too. it isn’t an insult. you could always do “She” if its a prized possession or “He” if its a disgusting/disturbing thing. So its not really just “It” and “They”
@emarceeqem4715
@emarceeqem4715 2 жыл бұрын
@@stego- I'm not saying "it" for a supposed race of sexless aliens is always an invalid choice. I'm saying it might not be what the author is going for. That was a key part of what I wrote.
@DDProCo
@DDProCo Жыл бұрын
Imma start using thon/thonself to annoy my dad and when he complains, ‘1858!’
@globingoblin
@globingoblin Жыл бұрын
This is literally 1858 by George Orwell
@Doopen
@Doopen 4 ай бұрын
when thon complains
@TheEudaemonicPlague
@TheEudaemonicPlague 2 жыл бұрын
Not knowing this channel, I nearly passed on this video--the last one I saw discussing "they" was just some idiot crying about it, not realizing at all how long it's been part of the English language. This is one of the best explanations about any word I've ever seen. I was cheated of most of the education I was legally required to have, so I was never taught more than the most basic of grammar. Fortunately, I function well as an autodidact. Along the way, I've learned of a number of the stunts grammarians and classicists of the past couple of hundred years have pulled, including hating "they" for no good reason, and trying to get rid of it. If this channel covers this sort of topic, I'll have to sub.
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
i'm glad you enjoyed :) i try my best
@ecogreen123
@ecogreen123 Жыл бұрын
me aswell, was pleasantly surprised.
@zenkim6709
@zenkim6709 Жыл бұрын
IKR? Like how English teachers tried like hell to stamp out the word "ain't" as "improper English" back when I was a schoolkid growing up ...when a shocking number of commonly-used words in English-speaking countries are absolutely *not* English words! - rendezvous (French) - armada (Spanish) - shampoo (Hindi) - kangaroo (Australian Aboriginal) As anyone who's studied linguistics knows, any living language is a live, moving target -- dictionaries & teachers don't define a language, the people who use & adapt that language R the real ones who ultimately decide that. Fun fact: other than Esperanto, Hangool (the official language of Korea) is the only exception I can think of -- an invention of a Korean king who singlehandedly developed both a new spoken language & a unique written alphabet in order to solve the mishmash of competing, incompatible Chinese dialects that were causing endless confusion & frustration for himself & his subjects. Unlike Esperanto, Hangool had the power of both royal decree & an official army to back up its adoption & dictate its correct usage....
@blunderbus2695
@blunderbus2695 Жыл бұрын
@@zenkim6709 "...when a shocking number of commonly-used words in English-speaking countries are absolutely not English words!" Always remember: English doesn't borrow words from other languages. It chases them down into dark alleyways and mugs them.
@specialopsdave
@specialopsdave Жыл бұрын
As a formally educated man, you just taught me a new word, "autodidact". You really should be proud of yourself
@princestory26
@princestory26 2 жыл бұрын
as a Tagalog speaker, singular "they" makes so much sense because it's like our gender neutral 3rd person singular "siya/niya/kaniya". a lot of native words, except for some Spanish and English loanwoards, are gender neutral in Tagalog, and the only way you can reveal the gender is by literally adding male/female: e.g. "anak" = child/offspring, "anak na babae" = (literally "child/offspring" that is female") daughter.
@mikulover493
@mikulover493 Жыл бұрын
@@eradict ???
@kimaya.3563
@kimaya.3563 Жыл бұрын
I want to learn tagalog so bad but there's barely resources online and I cant move there rn as of now 😭😭
@angsilaw
@angsilaw Жыл бұрын
@@eradict Austronesian languages are literally ungendered like most languages in the world 😭 what the hell are you taking about
@angsilaw
@angsilaw Жыл бұрын
My mom is Bisaya and she calls me and my sister “nak” (it might ‘nak but idk what the full word is). Austronesian languages are ungendered at heart!
@nostalgcis
@nostalgcis Жыл бұрын
i'm adding this to my list of reasons to learn tagalog, thanks
@sebbrennan3574
@sebbrennan3574 2 жыл бұрын
I had an argument with my English teacher about this topic in Year 9, with him against the use of "they" as a singular pronoun. I wish I could have seen this video 5 years ago so I could have destroyed him
@_blank-_
@_blank-_ 2 жыл бұрын
Nerd
@isabellach
@isabellach 2 жыл бұрын
Even without this video and sure you would have destroyed him. There is no logical way to hate singular they. It's been around longer than singular you!
@devonodonnell715
@devonodonnell715 2 жыл бұрын
I think the best way to comeback at these sorts of argument is this. Language is spoken, used and defined by its native speakers. No matter how important or proper you claim to be, whatever authority you are part of, English will always be defined and spoken by its natives. The way the people wish the language to be is the way it is.
@MrHoggReads
@MrHoggReads 2 жыл бұрын
@@isabellach Do you know of a case where someone with a (known) name was refered to as "they"? "Go talk to Shakespeare. They will help you." Something like that from the past?
@actualgoblin
@actualgoblin 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrHoggReads yeah
@Jawbonez_22
@Jawbonez_22 Жыл бұрын
I personally find it rather confusing but your point of “get over it” genuinely makes sense to me. While currently my mind only thinks of they/them as a person who is entirely unknown, I see no reason why over time I couldn’t come to think of it for people who I do know. Language evolves, and unless you want to sound out of touch, you’d best evolve with it
@Sockem1223
@Sockem1223 Жыл бұрын
Agree. We speak what is natural. Prescriptivism is wrong, whether it's for or against the new use of singular "they" to refer to a known person. If it sticks, it sticks. If another neat solution comes along, that's cool too.
@The_pringles_guy
@The_pringles_guy Жыл бұрын
I’m happy to see this willingness to learn, even though it may take some time, have a great day Alex
@takatamiyagawa5688
@takatamiyagawa5688 Жыл бұрын
Logically, if "they" is an acceptable pronoun for a person of unknown gender, the discovery of their gender should not make "they" completely unacceptable (although upon discovery, the speaker may logically prefer to use "he" or "she").
@DustfeatherOfFire
@DustfeatherOfFire Жыл бұрын
Indeed - to further elaborate on your point, the phrase "you'd better evolve with it" is considered standard English nowadays, but I remember my Gran saying that she once had a tutor who told her off for using "you" instructionally or when writing to an unknown reader. "One" was considered to be the correct pronoun in this instance: i.e. "One should be careful" instead of "You should be careful".
@average_person444
@average_person444 8 ай бұрын
​@@TechnoticPlatehow does that spund like a caveman??
@SolarLingua
@SolarLingua 2 жыл бұрын
In German, if a subject is unknown, the use of the male 3rd person singular has persisted. "Jeder hat seine eigenen Träume!" (Everybody has HIS own dreams.) Also interestingly, the possesive pronouns for "her" and "their" in German are the same - "ihre". I have actually no idea, whether the plural comes from the singular, or if these 2 words have their own origin.
@GameTornado01
@GameTornado01 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, as a German, the entire German grammatical gender system belongs thrown out of the window
@lonestarr1490
@lonestarr1490 2 жыл бұрын
More than that, "jeder" is male as well, with the female analog being "jede". One could use "alle" as an unspecific alternative. Curiously, this necessitates the use of the female (or plural?) version in the above sentence: "Alle haben ihre eigenen Träume!" Just as "all" instead of "everybody" would demand the use of "their" instead of "his" (thus, it's probably plural, not female).
@nilkonom
@nilkonom 2 жыл бұрын
we have "ens" now
@lebens3585
@lebens3585 2 жыл бұрын
Which is certainly not used by a lot of people, especially when not online, and was created by a singular person. Even people i know who do make an elaborate effort to gender and such don't use it. Honestly I personally often quite intuitively use die and deren to refer to people of unknown gender , (though perhaps that is due to the influence english has had on me) but I have never seen anyone use Ens, except in a short clip i one saw where the person who invented it talked about it. But just saying "we have ens now." Cmon, that's just not the case for almost all german people, even those who do make an effort to use gender inclusive language.
@lonestarr1490
@lonestarr1490 2 жыл бұрын
@@nilkonom We have what? Please elaborate.
@Smonserratm
@Smonserratm 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a native speaker of a pro drop pronouns language, which means you can sometimes sidestep the whole thing by ommitting the pronouns. I've found that I intuitively translate these sentences to English in my head using 'it' before realising it might sound offensive. It's weird because Catalan works like French regarding pronouns, so I would expect to naturally favour 'he' in these sentences.
@spicynoodle7419
@spicynoodle7419 2 жыл бұрын
Same, which is why I'm looking for a third language that is pro-drop and phonetic. This is simply the best combination. So far the best match I've found is Italian. Wikipedia says that in Italian you can drop all pronouns, not only in some situations, unlike my native language.
@aaaahdjsn
@aaaahdjsn 2 жыл бұрын
@@spicynoodle7419 Hungarian
@Shar3dAccount
@Shar3dAccount 2 жыл бұрын
This was the longest way to say "get used to it" in the most passive agressive way. I love it Edit: please stop commenting I could literally care less whether or not you'll adjust for others who prefer they/them I just wanted to point it out for the funnies
@arlert4396
@arlert4396 2 жыл бұрын
It's not even "get used to it" it's "you are already used to it and desperately trying to convince yourself that you aren't."
@landaclay9331
@landaclay9331 Жыл бұрын
I will never call some one they or them if they view them self as non binary which is a mental illness ime calling it a it just like I call any object because objects don't have gender
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN Жыл бұрын
@@landaclay9331 ratio
@bunningssnags6104
@bunningssnags6104 Жыл бұрын
@@landaclay9331 if no1s gonna tell him i will "I will never call some oen they or them if **THEY** view **THEM** self as non binary..." you literally contradicted yourself two words after saying something
@Shar3dAccount
@Shar3dAccount Жыл бұрын
@@bunningssnags6104 if they complain its proper grammar they're still referring to a nonbinary person as they/them so yeah..
@thornescapes7707
@thornescapes7707 Жыл бұрын
If someone cannot comprehend singular "they", how can they comprehend the rest of the language? Singular "they" is not very confusing. It's extremely simple. It's grammatically correct and historically grounded. It's older than modern English.
@LiliannEnder
@LiliannEnder Жыл бұрын
And yet people keep arguing that it is only a plural pronoun, when really it can be both singular and plural
@thornescapes7707
@thornescapes7707 Жыл бұрын
@@LiliannEnder It's amazing how many people have incredibly strong opinions about English grammar and spelling, even though their arguments often prove that they have no real understanding of English grammar or spelling. It's bizarre.
@aiaioioi
@aiaioioi Жыл бұрын
for real. no one is confused by "you" meaning informal second person, formal second person and multiple second person, yet singular "they" is somehow confusing. also i think we should start using "thou" again as informal second person.
@somegrill7561
@somegrill7561 Жыл бұрын
They just don’t like y’all
@thornescapes7707
@thornescapes7707 Жыл бұрын
@@somegrill7561 It isn't even about that. When you are talking to someone online, often you won't know their gender. If you don't know their gender, what pronouns should you use? Should you just default to "he" for them? Should you use "he/she/it/they", just to cover all the bases? Or would it make more sense just to use singular "they" as a default, like I have been doing continually through this comment ("use for them")? Singular "they" is the most natural choice when you aren't certain about gender. The non-binary aspect is incidental.
@meganton9417
@meganton9417 Жыл бұрын
As a german i truly envy your true neutral they! We really have to try hard constructing new inclusive forms violating tons of grammatical rules, so use your privilege!
@connaeris8230
@connaeris8230 Жыл бұрын
Same with Italian, but we don't even have neutral adjectives. It's a mess.
@gjvnq
@gjvnq Жыл бұрын
Same problem in Portuguese :(
@BrightyLighty_
@BrightyLighty_ Жыл бұрын
​@@connaeris8230 For romance languages, I've seen "elle" in Spanish before (though it's obviously way more obscure then the English equivalent). This idea doesn't loan into Italian easily, sadly... maybe "lai"? For portuguese you could maybe do "elo"
@bumpkin8009
@bumpkin8009 Жыл бұрын
Man i hate your laungage soo mutch, it's so anyoing to have to work trough a senfece like a toddler trying to complete a puzzle
@Sockem1223
@Sockem1223 Жыл бұрын
man can't we just be our unique selves wherever on the masculine/androgynous/feminine/neuter spectrum we want to be, without feeling threatened by gender in natural language
@yokowan
@yokowan 2 жыл бұрын
a few years ago i had an english teacher lecture us about how singular they was ungrammatical and that we should use "he or she" in essays. right after reading works by shakespeare which use singular they . . .
@iris_drawssandwiches
@iris_drawssandwiches Жыл бұрын
Well seems he or she wasn't paying attention to shakespeare and I wonder if he or she has ever tried writing only using that. I'll just drop some facts now. William Shakespeare (bapt. 26 April1564 - 23 April 1616) was an English playwright, poet and actor. He or she is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He or she is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "the Bard"). His extant works, including collaborations, consist of some 39 plays,[e] 154 sonnets, three long narrative poems, and a few other verses, some of uncertain authorship. His or her plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. He or she remains arguably the most influential writer in the English language, and his or her works continue to be studied and reinterpreted.
@cloudlily8835
@cloudlily8835 Жыл бұрын
That's hilarious, I wonder how your teacher missed the irony so hard. I don't understand why schools allow teachers to spread their biased opinions to students, knowledge should be objective, and "they" is objectively correct grammar-wise. No amount of arguing will change that.
@TreespeakerOfTheLand
@TreespeakerOfTheLand Жыл бұрын
Did someone point their irony out?
@-orczy-5111
@-orczy-5111 2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact! In Hungarian, we only have ő, which is gender neutral. We either use that or refere to the person with their name (there are no gender neutral names though). Then again, pronouns can be left out completely in the language, as you can make normal sentences without using them (so for example you could say "I am eating" without including "I". You´d only include it when it´s the focus point of the sentence.)
@_blank-_
@_blank-_ 2 жыл бұрын
Can't believe Hungarians are non-binary, Orban is such an enby icon 😍
@keeprollin9911
@keeprollin9911 2 жыл бұрын
@@_blank-_ I think you misinterpreted couple parts of the comment haha
@jonathanlange1339
@jonathanlange1339 2 жыл бұрын
So you have verb conjugation in your language?
@-orczy-5111
@-orczy-5111 2 жыл бұрын
@@jonathanlange1339 yup
@gergelygalvacsy2251
@gergelygalvacsy2251 2 жыл бұрын
@@jonathanlange1339 yeah, for the most part we dont even use personal pronouns all that often, because inflections do the job
@yourfriendlyneighbourhoodo436
@yourfriendlyneighbourhoodo436 Жыл бұрын
The existence of pronouns implies the existence of casual nouns
@-bugbite
@-bugbite Жыл бұрын
🤯
@globingoblin
@globingoblin Жыл бұрын
Noobnouns
@paulnewton2284
@paulnewton2284 Жыл бұрын
But of course! Casual nouns usually only refer to one or two things, so they only come into play every once in a while. Pronouns though? They gotta cover for everything.
@fluffybytez
@fluffybytez 9 ай бұрын
the transgender competition
@alejandromonteroborbon5696
@alejandromonteroborbon5696 8 ай бұрын
@@globingoblin Hackernouns
@halagavi
@halagavi 2 жыл бұрын
Indonesian Pronouns ✓ Epicine Third-Person Singular Animate (dia) ✓ Second-Person Singular (kamu) ≠ Second-Person Plural (kalian) ✓ Inclusive First-Person Plural (kita) ≠ Exclusive First-Person Plural (kami)
@diamdante
@diamdante 2 жыл бұрын
mal-indo unironically the best language on earth, grammatically speaking
@VEVOJavier
@VEVOJavier 2 жыл бұрын
Noone asked
@nanamacapagal8342
@nanamacapagal8342 2 жыл бұрын
Works in Filipino too Inclusive "we" = Tayo/Natin Exclusive "we" = Kami/Namin Second person singular = Ikaw/Mo Second person plural = Kayo/Ninyo Third person singular (EPICENE ONLY) = Siya/Niya Third person plural (Again, EPICENE ONLY) = Sila/Nila
@violenttoddler
@violenttoddler 2 жыл бұрын
@@VEVOJavier You can’t just go to a comment section on a video about linguistics and then complain when people are talking about linguistics.
@SocialDownclimber
@SocialDownclimber 2 жыл бұрын
@@violenttoddler They are just upset because nobody asked *them*
@hutshelll
@hutshelll 2 жыл бұрын
Finally someone gets that 'they' can be singular
@nibbletrinnal2289
@nibbletrinnal2289 2 жыл бұрын
why "finally"? wasn't the entire point of the video that singular they has been around for a long time now and are more accepted than any alternative by the majority of people?
@leonader9465
@leonader9465 2 жыл бұрын
Most people get that.
@hutshelll
@hutshelll 2 жыл бұрын
​@@nibbletrinnal2289 I know but lots of people still don't recognise that they isn't always plural
@ballscrusher4
@ballscrusher4 2 жыл бұрын
@@hutshelll they intentionally go out of their way to pretend they don't get it just to delegitimise nonbinary people
@michaelsalmon9832
@michaelsalmon9832 2 жыл бұрын
only to accommodate people who are mentally ill or women who are desperate for attention for progressive acceptance points
@MoshCat13
@MoshCat13 2 жыл бұрын
Edit: idk why folks decided to started arguing under my comment so I'm just gonna leave this here now: go outside and breathe. Life is short.
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN 2 жыл бұрын
nice pfp
@liznohandle
@liznohandle 2 жыл бұрын
Many moons ago when I was in college the official style guides(MLA? APA) required the awkward "he or she". I went with rearranging my sentences to use "one" or "a person" instead. Malicious compliance and extra words for the word count.
@MoshCat13
@MoshCat13 2 жыл бұрын
@@liznohandle I have actually done that as well, that's what I did before I started just using "they" lol
@duckified.
@duckified. 2 жыл бұрын
It baffles me why schools care so much, because they say it's "confusing" even when they actually perfectly understand what you're trying to say. They try to make the excuse about "WELL what if there are two or more people and you're only talking about one of them?? How am i supposed to know who you're talking about???" In reality, when you're talking about a single person in a group of people, you'd specify by using their names anyway, or something along the lines of "one person" and "the other person". You'd rarely ever see a sentence like "a student and a teacher were talking, and they asked a question." Instead, it would be "a student and a teacher were talking, and *the student* asked a question." People who hate the use of singular they are literally just knit picking for the most isolated examples and using them to base their entire hatred off of.
@shadybat3183
@shadybat3183 2 жыл бұрын
@@jeremy5602 🤓
@ManuArtz1
@ManuArtz1 Жыл бұрын
This actually changed my vision on the non-binary use of “they”, I should’ve done my research, I always thought that “they” could only be used as plural and thus couldn’t be used by a person that hasn’t established their gender or just don’t want to, I purposely didn’t use “they”, I genuinely thought it was stupid, but I should’ve dug deeper, great video by the way, straight to the point and pretty informative on the use of pronouns in general.
@midnightwalkers8077
@midnightwalkers8077 Жыл бұрын
Congrats on changing your mind. It actually take a lot to when confronted with new information change your previously held beliefs.
@MarcyRavenManji
@MarcyRavenManji Жыл бұрын
hey man, I was in the same boat some 4-ish years ago, and now I'm trans LOL you learn and you discover more about the world and yourself. good on you for growing
@walleras
@walleras Жыл бұрын
@@MarcyRavenManji stop it Get some help
@MarcyRavenManji
@MarcyRavenManji Жыл бұрын
@@walleras and what sort of help are you suggesting I get? Take some time to reflect on yourself and others my friend.
@Haylla2008
@Haylla2008 Жыл бұрын
It is well put together and informative but it basically comes down to something even admitted in the video. It's confusing. And, with the way the singular "they" is already utilized in the English language, it is too confusing. And for people to adopt practices, they have to want to. And people don't want to adopt confusing practices, especially when there's nothing to gain from it. I also doubt there's enough people claiming to be nonbinary to make it common practice. And I don't think this fad of people calling themselves nonbinary is going to last much longer than the emo fad in the 2000s.
@sonkeschluter3654
@sonkeschluter3654 2 жыл бұрын
As a german a heartfelt thank you for explaining that to me, i was always a bit confused by it, probably because we dont have the epicene.
@ynx999
@ynx999 2 жыл бұрын
Und wie gut es wäre, eins zu haben...
@isabellach
@isabellach 2 жыл бұрын
Neo pronouns? I know they are not really used but....
@naytte9286
@naytte9286 2 жыл бұрын
@@ynx999 Es würde nichts bringen. Das generische Maskulinum reicht meinetwegen völlig aus.
@Zula_The_Squid
@Zula_The_Squid 2 жыл бұрын
@@naytte9286 Das generische Maskulinum ist toll, wenn man größere Gruppen anspricht (auf jeden Fall besser als der Gendersternabfall.) Ist für einzelne Personen aber leider nicht so angenehm. Hätte schon noch gerne geschlechtsneutrale Singularpronomen im Deutschen, für wenn man über Nichtbinäre Personen spricht. Am Besten aber welche, die man auch aussprechen kann, und kein seltsammes Neu-Pronomen Zeug. Mir wäre es am Liebsten, wenn wir einfach They/Them als Die/Denen dem Englischen entlehnen, und die Einzahl dann reinkontextualisieren. Fühlt sich so finde ich am Natürlichsten an und braucht keine Sonderzeichen oder neue Wörter.
@naytte9286
@naytte9286 2 жыл бұрын
@@Zula_The_Squid ich glaube, das ist die Krux des Ganzen. Meiner Weltauffassung nach ist man entweder Mann oder Frau, nichts anderes.
@tictacmaybeau6707
@tictacmaybeau6707 2 жыл бұрын
In elementary school I distinctly remember being taught that the English standard pronouns were: I, you, we, y’all, she, he, they, and it. With I, you, we, y’all, she, he, and they all being used to refer to people, and it being an object. We and y’all were plurals. I, you, she, and he were singulars. And they was the special pronoun that acted as both singular or plural depending on the context. I don’t see what’s so hard to get about it.
@beeankha
@beeankha Жыл бұрын
Wow, did you get taught y'all for formal use or just in general? I think that y'all is really only in the US. Unless people adopt it.
@jacksoncastro136
@jacksoncastro136 Жыл бұрын
@@beeankha Y'all is not only in the US. Other languages have something similar - Spanish, to name one.
@beeankha
@beeankha Жыл бұрын
@@jacksoncastro136 I'm talking about English not other languages
@Nakia11798
@Nakia11798 Жыл бұрын
Why was your elementary school teaching "y'all"? That's not actually a recognized word, let alone a pronoun.
@SpinDuality
@SpinDuality Жыл бұрын
@@Nakia11798 Ya'll was used as an example to teach children of abbreviations such as we'll, they'll and you'll. It was also a great example to teach students of slang words in english.
@immorality371
@immorality371 Жыл бұрын
my english teacher has taken to putting he/she/they and his/hers/theirs on assignments which is just, strange to me. because on one hand its including people like me but also it feels even more clunky when one 'they' does the same job
@ganymedehedgehog371
@ganymedehedgehog371 Жыл бұрын
Yeah that sounds more like paperwork than an assignment
@elius1548
@elius1548 Жыл бұрын
Same, it’s so weird
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN Жыл бұрын
@@elius1548 nice pfp
@elius1548
@elius1548 Жыл бұрын
@@RichConnerGMN Tysm!
@budgetcommander4849
@budgetcommander4849 Жыл бұрын
saying more just to end up excluding nonbinary people
@khos8343
@khos8343 Жыл бұрын
Here’s a history lesson in the use of singular “they” which goes back all the way back to the middle ages (courtesy of the Oxford English dictionary): The Oxford English Dictionary traces singular they back to 1375, where it appears in the medieval romance William and the Werewolf. Except for the old-style language of that poem, its use of singular they to refer to an unnamed person seems very modern. Here’s the Middle English version: ‘Hastely hiȝed eche . . . þei neyȝþed so neiȝh . . . þere william & his worþi lef were liand i-fere.’ In modern English, that’s: ‘Each man hurried . . . till they drew near . . . where William and his darling were lying together.’ Since forms may exist in speech long before they’re written down, it’s likely that singular they was common even before the late fourteenth century. That makes an old form even older. In the eighteenth century, grammarians began warning that singular they was an error because a plural pronoun can’t take a singular antecedent. They clearly forgot that singular you was a plural pronoun that had become singular as well. You functioned as a polite singular for centuries, but in the seventeenth century singular you replaced thou, thee, and thy, except for some dialect use. That change met with some resistance. In 1660, George Fox, the founder of Quakerism, wrote a whole book labeling anyone who used singular you an idiot or a fool. And eighteenth-century grammarians like Robert Lowth and Lindley Murray regularly tested students on thou as singular, you as plural, despite the fact that students used singular you when their teachers weren’t looking, and teachers used singular you when their students weren’t looking. Anyone who said thou and thee was seen as a fool and an idiot, or a Quaker, or at least hopelessly out of date. Singular you has become normal and unremarkable. Also unremarkable are the royal we and, in countries without a monarchy, the editorial we: first-person plurals used regularly as singulars and nobody calling anyone an idiot and a fool. And singular they is well on its way to being normal and unremarkable as well. Toward the end of the twentieth century, language authorities began to approve the form. The New Oxford Dictionary of English (1998) not only accepts singular they, they also use the form in their definitions. And the New Oxford American Dictionary (Third Edition, 2010), calls singular they ‘generally accepted’ with indefinites, and ‘now common but less widely accepted’ with definite nouns, especially in formal contexts. Not everyone is down with singular they. The well-respected Chicago Manual of Style still rejects singular they for formal writing, and just the other day a teacher told me that he still corrects students who use everyone … their in their papers, though he probably uses singular they when his students aren’t looking. Last Fall, a transgender Florida school teacher was removed from their fifth-grade classroom for asking their students to refer to them with the gender-neutral singular they. And two years ago, after the Diversity Office at the University of Tennessee suggested that teachers ask their students, ‘What’s your pronoun?’ because some students might prefer an invented nonbinary pronoun like zie or something more conventional, like singular they, the Tennessee state legislature passed a law banning the use of taxpayer dollars for gender-neutral pronouns, despite the fact that no one knows how much a pronoun actually costs. It’s no surprise that Tennessee, the state that banned the teaching of evolution in 1925, also failed to stop the evolution of English one hundred years later, because the fight against singular they was already lost by the time eighteenth-century critics began objecting to it. In 1794, a contributor to the New Bedford Medley mansplains to three women that the singular they they used in an earlier essay in the newspaper was grammatically incorrect and does no ‘honor to themselves, or the female sex in general.’ To which they honourably reply that they used singular they on purpose because ‘we wished to conceal the gender,’ and they challenge their critic to invent a new pronoun if their politically-charged use of singular they upsets him so much. More recently, a colleague who is otherwise conservative told me that they found singular they useful ‘when talking about what certain people in my field say about other people in my field as a way of concealing the identity of my source.’ Former Chief Editor of the OED Robert Burchfield, in The New Fowler’s Dictionary of Modern English Usage (1996), dismisses objections to singular they as unsupported by the historical record. Burchfield observes that the construction is ‘passing unnoticed’ by speakers of standard English as well as by copy editors, and he concludes that this trend is ‘irreversible’. People who want to be inclusive, or respectful of other people’s preferences, use singular they. And people who don’t want to be inclusive, or who don’t respect other people’s pronoun choices, use singular they as well. Even people who object to singular they as a grammatical error use it themselves when they’re not looking, a sure sign that anyone who objects to singular they is, if not a fool or an idiot, at least hopelessly out of date.
@silverstorm3729
@silverstorm3729 Жыл бұрын
fantastic comment, and hard agree on the final part...I think the whole conservative argument "singular they/them doesn't make any sense!!!" isn't truly an argument as much as a meme told between conservatives to mock modern changes in gender, and subsequently, changes in language. it takes two seconds of thought to realize that English uses they/them all the time in varied contexts, and that it's pretty damn useful, but when you're a conservative mindlessly repeating a meme to your friends, i guess two seconds of thought is too much to ask for.
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765 Жыл бұрын
just here to applaud the essay-in-a-comment, from a fellow comment essayist. also enjoyed the splash of ME at the start, a period of english I devoted 7 years of my life to studying and learning.
@NatalleeK
@NatalleeK Жыл бұрын
Love this. Also a pronoun costs exactly $2.45 in my country
@jaywinged
@jaywinged Жыл бұрын
readin allat. good comment
@juniperrodley9843
@juniperrodley9843 7 ай бұрын
@@NatalleeK can I have some for free, as a treat
@robin_queer
@robin_queer 2 жыл бұрын
What a refreshing video. Thank you. Being pretty deeply and openly Queer and GNC, I've kinda gotten used to being burned by my hobbies, this was not only really interesting, but a breath of fresh air
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN 2 жыл бұрын
nice pfp
@robin_queer
@robin_queer 2 жыл бұрын
@@RichConnerGMN thank you much, you too!
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
thank you! that's so nice to hear, I've been getting so many comments from people complaining about how I've left logic and facts behind and fallen to the gay agenda, but it's nice to see fellow queer people actually appreciate it
@robin_queer
@robin_queer 2 жыл бұрын
@@kklein As an amateur linguist and especially as a queer, I love this video! Still smiling from when I first watched this morning
@Pyrodiac
@Pyrodiac 2 жыл бұрын
@@RichConnerGMN Agreed.
@Milkydere
@Milkydere 2 жыл бұрын
"What could be more grammatically incorrect than using a gendered pronoun for someone... Which doesn't match their gender?" I literally screamed, this is the biggest roast I've ever witnessed in my whole life.
@therealshmorg
@therealshmorg 2 жыл бұрын
aubey omoi
@Milkydere
@Milkydere 2 жыл бұрын
@@therealshmorg yes.
@duckified.
@duckified. 2 жыл бұрын
i'm kinda slow, i didn't understand it 😭
@Milkydere
@Milkydere 2 жыл бұрын
@@duckified. using a gendered pronoun for someone non binary is technically wrong gramatically, bc it doesn't match their gender, its like using she for a guy
@kusurrone9976
@kusurrone9976 2 жыл бұрын
@@duckified. it means it's a logical mistake to refuse to use a certain pronounce because that person identifies different
@schroedingersband
@schroedingersband 5 ай бұрын
As an English major... People have a problem with singular they? Today? As in this very century?
@woofie3917
@woofie3917 5 ай бұрын
Conservatives who don't like non-binary people going by they/them forget about how it's a very normal thing, it mainly just stems from ignorance.
@burner555
@burner555 5 ай бұрын
It's idiots who forgot how grammar works
@Vazlist
@Vazlist 3 ай бұрын
I know, right? Epicene they is ancient and used all the time even today, but people somehow didn't realize it or something?
@lambkiddo3561
@lambkiddo3561 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video + informed + based + inclusive + grammatically correct + great end + underrated channel + Liked + subscribed + simple +easy to understand
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
:D
@panic9452
@panic9452 Жыл бұрын
overall w
@NeokiAr
@NeokiAr Жыл бұрын
Ancara messi ancara messi
@thataintfalco7106
@thataintfalco7106 Жыл бұрын
I feel like people don’t know that they can be used to describe a person that is hooded, hiding their gender/face. “They leaped over, face cloaked as they slashed through the table.” Singular they has existed before lol, regardless of your thoughts on the new pronoun stuff.
@CrypticCobra
@CrypticCobra Жыл бұрын
yes.. because that person's gender is not known. The only difference with the modern issue is people "know" someone wants to be called they/then but also see clear signs of a certain gender, and chose to base the terms used of their visual observation of gender.
@sub-harmonik
@sub-harmonik Жыл бұрын
@@CrypticCobra in practice, 'they' is less ambiguous when referring to an unknown individual than for a known individual because that unknown individual has typically just been referred to, and there are established conventions for clarifying distinctions between an unknown individual and a group that aren't necessary when using 'he' or 'she' to refer to known individuals, for instance. But, 'thon' would be better even for that historical usage imo.
@theredknight9314
@theredknight9314 Жыл бұрын
I would just use it.
@thataintfalco7106
@thataintfalco7106 Жыл бұрын
@@theredknight9314 yeah, just saying that singular they isn’t just nonbinary
@theredknight9314
@theredknight9314 Жыл бұрын
@@thataintfalco7106 no no, what I meant is I would just use the pronoun “it”
@RenKohana
@RenKohana Жыл бұрын
Glad to see the resurgence of singular “they.” When I was in elementary school, I remember my parents lecturing me not to use the pronoun “they” to refer to a singular person. In the end, I resigned myself to say “he or she,” “his or her,” or “one,” etc.
@TopOfAllWorlds
@TopOfAllWorlds Жыл бұрын
I still like one and a pronoun, it's fun to use when you're being ironically grandiose lol
@kirbydude2523
@kirbydude2523 Жыл бұрын
An example I like to use in that situation is that no one says "he or she cut me off!" when they're driving and someone cuts them off on the road
@algotkristoffersson15
@algotkristoffersson15 Жыл бұрын
But one is even less grammatically correct by her own logic because it just means “you the way you would use it if you said this sentence” referring to people in general, which is even pluraler than they, now To be clear I am okay with you using it as such, I am just suprised she is.
@TheSpiralProgression
@TheSpiralProgression Жыл бұрын
I would mention that “Man” in terms of Human has always been neutral and dates itself back as a generic term for person (which side note is weirdly a case of masculine becoming neutral as it’s “per son”) in Proto-Indo-European. The term for males in older English was “Wer” (where “werewolf” comes from) while female was “Wif” (where “wife” came from). It’s only later on that man became a gendered term for males while also still being neutral but it started off as epicene.
@algotkristoffersson15
@algotkristoffersson15 8 ай бұрын
And how and why did it become gendered?
@TheSpiralProgression
@TheSpiralProgression 8 ай бұрын
@@algotkristoffersson15 for the same reason they were trying to push he/him pronouns as the default in place of singular “they”
@algotkristoffersson15
@algotkristoffersson15 8 ай бұрын
@@TheSpiralProgression which is what?
@gnarzikans
@gnarzikans 2 жыл бұрын
you also have the use of "thon" pre-dating Converse's recommendation because of a dialectal version contracting "that yon" present in parts of ireland, scotland, and england. interestingly, thon in this capacity--meaning "that one or those over there"--can also be both singular and plural
@redjarww3882
@redjarww3882 2 жыл бұрын
I love speaking a language without gendered pronouns
@superluigidummy
@superluigidummy 2 жыл бұрын
wish i could relate
@dondog3123
@dondog3123 2 жыл бұрын
As a malay speaker "dia" is an inclusive pronouns for everyone else here
@歌愛ユキ-e2g
@歌愛ユキ-e2g Жыл бұрын
I’m an Indonesian learner and I’ve never felt so much relief to see that things aren’t gendered like in my mother tongue (Spanish)
@dollenhouse4691
@dollenhouse4691 Жыл бұрын
When talking,we use the same pronouns“ta” in Mandarin While writing,we used to use the same 他 in Chinese.For some reason,we added a new word 她,which is a female pronouns it always bothers me cuz 他 doesnt have gendered definition,then why added a new for female?
@wisteriaaaaaa
@wisteriaaaaaa Жыл бұрын
i am an italian mandarin student and i too find quite silly the fact that 她 and 他 are pronounced the same way but written differently. like!!! i don’t like that it’s non specific just as long as it’s spoken. my classmate did tell me that a gender non specific 3rd person pronoun currently exists but I forgot the character and I can’t remember if it was legit or not.
@akachickennuggets9190
@akachickennuggets9190 2 жыл бұрын
“After all, what’s more grammatically incorrect than using a gendered pronoun for someone that doesn’t match their gender.” I AM STEALING THIS.
@l.2620
@l.2620 Жыл бұрын
@@landaclay9331 Unbased and also just scientifically wrong
@akachickennuggets9190
@akachickennuggets9190 Жыл бұрын
@@landaclay9331 and your mom likes when I’m both of them
@MsZsc
@MsZsc Жыл бұрын
@@landaclay9331 supposing youre right too, it doesnt discredit the use of singular they in the slightest
@AA-cf4es
@AA-cf4es Жыл бұрын
Look at those kids tilted by simple biological truth of homo sapiens. If you are reading it, you either a male or female. You either have penis or vagina. You know perfect well your sex (and gender, because if you are not a language but a human being the only thing that is real is your sex); and you also know that no amount of wordlay would change it.
@MsZsc
@MsZsc Жыл бұрын
@@AA-cf4es how many 7 year-old sjw-recked compilations do you watch every day? Seriously though, people know that medical intervention in today's time isn't the most perfect thing and people know about the side effects, but there have been studies (im neutral) that demonstrate the overall good that medical intervention does, and the amount of good a little familial and local social acceptance will do for that person. However i doubt that this is your aim at all, to help people, and i doubt that you'll even read this far.
@darlindeli3340
@darlindeli3340 5 ай бұрын
Surely I'm not the only one who was taught about the use of a singular they in 2nd grade, right?
@the_roman_emperor_fisheater
@the_roman_emperor_fisheater 5 ай бұрын
Shhh don't let the idiots hear
@darlindeli3340
@darlindeli3340 5 ай бұрын
​@@the_roman_emperor_fisheaterNah the idiots need to know
@B.a.z.z796
@B.a.z.z796 5 ай бұрын
​@@darlindeli3340no they dont, the least they know the fastest natural selection can take them out
@taihaileizoe
@taihaileizoe 2 жыл бұрын
highly wish singular they was taught more in education, for natives AND ESL students! it's been established de facto for literal centuries, but only held back by the arguements mentioned in your video :(
@irok1
@irok1 2 жыл бұрын
Education mentions the grammatically correct way sometimes, but not always
@GimOA
@GimOA 2 жыл бұрын
I prefer study my grammar instead.
@taihaileizoe
@taihaileizoe 2 жыл бұрын
@@GimOA What do you mean by that?
@vazn3586
@vazn3586 7 ай бұрын
"Joe went to the movies. They enjoyed it" If someone told me that I would have to ask questions whether they are referring to a non-binary person or it was just a grammar mistake. Also, me personally, I think communication should be easy to get your point across with little confusion
@taihaileizoe
@taihaileizoe 7 ай бұрын
@vazn3586 that does sound like a you issue to be honest. i wouldnt say most people struggle with that, especially if in context, if that's what you're meaning. language is constantly vague and that is why communication involves clarifying language and intent 😊 language does not change just because you think it's easier, it just is, and it is and will always be subjective and typically vague without context and that is not a grammar mistake. if you watched the video you would know that singular they for a non-specific referent has been in use for centuries, and I don't think it's that uncommon in this day and age to have someone refer to someone else as either he/they or she/they, even if their pronouns are strictly she/her/hers or he/him/his there are plenty for articles including on Wikipedia if this is a topic that you struggle to understand or would like to do further reading
@samovarsa2640
@samovarsa2640 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you (hah) for pointing out that 'you' is both singular and plural depending on context and is thus completely in the same zone as 'they'.
@yulaserio
@yulaserio 2 жыл бұрын
As an english learner, this was very useful. I implemented "they" in my conversations and it feels as natural as the other pronouns.
@NeokiAr
@NeokiAr Жыл бұрын
Bicibandido
@caleb1413
@caleb1413 Жыл бұрын
I admit it still doesn't feel intuitive to me because I took school very seriously as a kid as well as having an English teacher who was a bit snobbish about language as a mother. Singular "they" was heavily emphasized as incorrect both at home and school during my childhood. It doesn't help that I'm on the autism spectrum and, while not sounding like Sheldon Cooper, I definitely lean towards the sort of speech patterns he parodies. Having said that, inclusion is a far higher priority than my slight discomfort, so I make a point of using singular "they" when it's appropriate. I still let out an unintentional "he or she" more often than I'd prefer, but I'm getting there.
@jordanmatthews1466
@jordanmatthews1466 Жыл бұрын
"Inclusion" should never be a priority. People with big friend groups get stabbed in the back. And it happens quite alot. Smart people tend not to have large friend groups. Smart people are not inclusive because, quite honestly, not everyone deserves to be liked, shown kindness or helped. Not everyone is a good person and, smart people inherently know this so, to lower the chances of being backstabbed, exploited or, hurt, very few people are allowed in. People that are very carefully observed are let in. Gatekeeping is NOT inherently bad and, making inclusivity a priority over self-preservation as well as your own boundaries is a massive mistake.
@hudsonhaynie1632
@hudsonhaynie1632 Жыл бұрын
@Jordan Matthews who hurt you? And why does it affect being respectful towards nonbinary folks?
@DrawtheCurtains
@DrawtheCurtains Жыл бұрын
@@hudsonhaynie1632 His comment doesn't really come off as somebody who has been hurt in some way, but rather as a fifteen year old trying to sound like a *b a d a s s*
@childofgod759
@childofgod759 Жыл бұрын
@@jordanmatthews1466 It does not matter if someone is a bad person, you *cannot* judge whether someone deserves to be "liked". i don't know how 'smart' you think you are but you dont come off very emotionally intelligent, because everyone even terrible people deserve basic human respect and needs. Thats what we owe eachother, we owe eachother kindness. Get off your high horse, and i dont care what that bullshit iq test says. Intelligence cant be measured accurately, so as far as you're aware you're about as smart as everyone else. Your way of seeing the world can create rigid hierarchies in your head and thats just not real life because no ones superior to anyone
@FriendlyRodrigo
@FriendlyRodrigo Жыл бұрын
@@jordanmatthews1466 most succesful people are extremely well capable of making connections. People who can't really make connections are much more likely to end up less succesfully in life. No matter how 'intelligent' (if they can't make connections, they are definitely not socially intelligent) they are.
@pettylein
@pettylein 2 жыл бұрын
That's extremely interesting because I didn't learned that in school. For me, they was always the pronoun for 3rd person plural, not singular. That's why I have trouble to get gender neutral writing and speech right because its just not in my head. It would be so much easier if everyone just used it also for non native speakers especially teachers.
@lukkamr
@lukkamr 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I had the same thing... I never got taught that "they" could be used singularly. Which is actually pretty weird concidering how common they is used as a singular pronoun.
@grendy558
@grendy558 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah as a non-native speaker just last year i saw a teacher say that for inclusivity people should use he or she, but she also said that next year they would be taught singular they. They didn't teach it before because it's "complicated". So they just taught the students the more useless he or she instead. At least they teach it though, just a bit late.
@Encysted
@Encysted 2 жыл бұрын
My teacher couldn’t even explain when to use “a” vs “an”: it’s not about spelling at all!
@ventreal4292
@ventreal4292 2 жыл бұрын
it is grammatically incorrect so thats why you werent taught it when referring to people
@aristoddle7947
@aristoddle7947 2 жыл бұрын
@@ventreal4292 What are you talking about lol
@Kyle_The_Furry
@Kyle_The_Furry 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who grew up speaking afrikaans, the debate around singular they is almost exactly the same, in afrikaans people use they in a singular context even though it's grammatically incorrect. But when you point out that they've used "they" to refer to one person, their brain shorts out and they start yelling at you. Even afrikaans professors will use it without realising.
@MB-hh2dh
@MB-hh2dh Жыл бұрын
It would be easier if people just accept that "they" can work like "singular when unknown gender", Nobody discusses if using "sie" in German as second person is incorrect, so using "they" as singular makes no sense in being discussed about if it's only and always singular (much less considering people has been using it like that since centuries)
@elenas3571
@elenas3571 2 жыл бұрын
People like to pretend that grammar rules are set in stone and not constantly evolving but language is fluid and ever changing. 15 years ago no one knew how to convey sarcasm thought text and then a SpongeBob meme went along and standardized the use of alternating lower and uppercase letters to convey sarcasm.
@stevencarr4002
@stevencarr4002 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. How long did it take people to learn Polari when it was first used on BBC Radio? Not long at all. Especially when people were starting to be fired or cancelled for not speaking it.
@ThW5
@ThW5 2 жыл бұрын
And how come I never noticed that?
@Shivermist110
@Shivermist110 2 жыл бұрын
You know, I never noticed that the capitalization was alternating, always thought it was randomized.
@appleciderhead6527
@appleciderhead6527 Жыл бұрын
Exactly it’s kinda like how Texans created the word “y’all”
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, I did not know that is a thing (alternative lower & uppercase letters to convey sarcasm, nor that it came from a SpongeBob meme)
@aloe-aurora
@aloe-aurora Жыл бұрын
This is the best summary of this topic that I've seen. I'm going to send it to the next family member or friend when they are having trouble wrapping their head around the singular "They". I've never bought a Thanks on KZbin before, so that should tell you how much I appreciate it. Have a coffee on me, my friend!
@bengilkes7676
@bengilkes7676 2 жыл бұрын
I was expecting the worst but you nailed it. I was taught the singular they at school in the eighties and specifically remember the teacher's disclaimer "in these modern times" before that lesson. I also remember my mum saying that it is incorrect. On a side note, I am learning Spanish and (I feel silly but it's true) when I watch videos in Spanish and they are using the plural 'you' conjugation, it feels really impersonal (haha that's the point I suppose). To clarify, in my sad little life, when watching a video in English, it feels like they are talking to me, not me and lots of others.
@MaddG_
@MaddG_ 2 жыл бұрын
I love the brief mention of neopronouns at the end, they're often overlooked in other similar videos I've seen online, and it's nice to see them get recognition that isn't constant slander.
@harryg9976
@harryg9976 2 жыл бұрын
Given that the most known-about neopronouns are unfortunately xe/xem (which suffer from the very minor problem of nobody knowing how to pronounce them) I can kind of understand the slander. Thon, while sounding a bit old and posh, seems like a much more natural option for the language.
@ARACHNIDPARTY
@ARACHNIDPARTY 2 жыл бұрын
@@harryg9976 fair point! i feel like it’s easier to look at neos like second names with different grammatical structures- at least that’s the way i view them. when i started using them it took me awhile to adjust to them myself lol
@MaimaiKuroshiro
@MaimaiKuroshiro 2 жыл бұрын
@@harryg9976 That brings me to another question. What is the best pronunciation for xe/xem? And speaking of neos... 1. A Pokemon fangame called Pokemon Reborn has a non-binary character who happens to use xe/xem, Adrienn, the fairy-type gym leader! 2. Another type of neopronoun that is on the mainstream, and whom I am also skeptical of are nounself neos (like cloud/cloudself). In my opinion, they're better off as nicknames, but the main point about this is that they are the true main contributor to neopronoun slander. 3. There is a debate whether "thon" is a neopronoun or the equivalent to they in Old English. Which one is true?
@mostm8589
@mostm8589 2 жыл бұрын
Dumb things deserve slander. English is too beautiful to pollute with this garbage.
@ARACHNIDPARTY
@ARACHNIDPARTY 2 жыл бұрын
@@mostm8589 “english is too beautiful to pollute with this garbage” mate, english is a frankenstiens monster made out of the corpses of every other language and is nearly incomprehensible if it isn’t your first. it’s about as beautiful as a rats ass. although i would be interested in why you think neo pronouns are dumb
@pihlah9789
@pihlah9789 Жыл бұрын
Such a great video! I'm Finnish and in our language we only have one, genderless pronoun in singular third person (instead of he and she), which is "hän". Also, in spoken language we usually refer to people as "se", which means it. Also we don't have masculine or feminine words and we don't use articles. So I'm glad we don't have to worry about genders in our language :) But I mean, Finnish has it's own difficulties too. I don't know if anyone will read this, but I find it interesting and I thought I might share!
@traijndeer
@traijndeer Жыл бұрын
as a enby person this is why i love finish
@ormedare7615
@ormedare7615 Жыл бұрын
Finnish is beautiful and I'm gonna use it for every instance when a person complains about having to use 'they' when they know another's sex
@Zooiest
@Zooiest Жыл бұрын
@@traijndeer same
@I-the-red
@I-the-red Жыл бұрын
The hän pronoun has found its way into Swedish and Norwegian as well in recent years, although at least in Norway there is a lot of push-back against it.
@garfieldbrooks
@garfieldbrooks Жыл бұрын
finnish is one of the most difficult languages i've ever tried to learn, but it's also one of my favorites
@Chartreuse_Moose
@Chartreuse_Moose Жыл бұрын
Written and edited by Me!? Wow, Me did such a great job when they put this together. 👍🏼 You did a great job, Me.
@JeremyPorcelain
@JeremyPorcelain Жыл бұрын
Nice job
@robo1540
@robo1540 2 жыл бұрын
having just one gender independent third person singular pronoun is a really cool thing in my opinion because i am biased because my language has been doing this forever since it came into existence but im not too fond of it being the exact same word as the plural, especially when some people are getting so sick of "you (sg)" and "you (pl)" being the same that they invented "yall", so imo its cool but itd be cooler if they were separate words
@electra_
@electra_ 2 жыл бұрын
simple answer: they and thall /j
@imveryangryitsnotbutter
@imveryangryitsnotbutter 2 жыл бұрын
Thall come back now y'hear?
@mxyellowo
@mxyellowo 2 жыл бұрын
​@@electra_ Wait I kinda like th'all, I'mma go and implement it into my English vocabulary now.
@kakahass8845
@kakahass8845 2 жыл бұрын
@@electra_ Thall sounds like a word in a fictional language it's very cool... also may I pronounce the "Th" in "Thall" as a coarticulated voiced dental labio-dental fricative?
@Cloiss_
@Cloiss_ 2 жыл бұрын
Many such cases - "you guys," "youse," "yins"...
@AnneAleph
@AnneAleph 2 жыл бұрын
English is my second language and when I first took note of the "they" debate it was very strange to me that people were complaining about it, it never sounded wrong grammatically and since my learning was VERY informal, I had already been using it that way from the start because I would hear people using it that way, any time you don't know or don't need to specify gender, "they/them" was there
@doomsdei4099
@doomsdei4099 2 жыл бұрын
in my senior year of high school, my english teacher tried to teach us to use ‘he or she’ instead of just ‘they’. and if we’d use they as a singular pronoun, she would argue with us over the matter. i always hated how clunky that sounded, and how she never even thought to realise how long the singular use of ‘they’ has been around.
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Жыл бұрын
Top ten things that NEVER happened. You use He or She if you know the gender. Simple as that
@darkira2129
@darkira2129 Жыл бұрын
tell her to use thon instead..
@Kenny-zv2wk
@Kenny-zv2wk Жыл бұрын
No be he or she is just too wordy imo.
@generatoralignmentdevalue
@generatoralignmentdevalue Жыл бұрын
English teachers can't realize that their "correct English" is a weird, formal register, and they certainly can't realize whose version of English got to be the one taught in schools, and why. It would invalidate their whole careers.
@thatonearanara
@thatonearanara Жыл бұрын
‘Therefore I an unable to can’ but like more exclusionary
@emerson685
@emerson685 Жыл бұрын
Let me tell you, as a lawyer I am held to pretty high writing standards, and even the legal profession is changing to except singular they. It's efficient and everyone know what you are talking about. Language evolves, even in It's most formal formats. No one writes like a lawyer from 100 years ago, and the system hasn't broken down yet (at least from a symantec standpoint). Clarity > tradition.
@user-bf3kp3ii4l
@user-bf3kp3ii4l 9 ай бұрын
your high writing standards as a lawyer must be astronomical when you still mess up except with accept
@crowposting
@crowposting 2 жыл бұрын
I remember trying to write something in middle school and I was very upset because I couldn't think of a gender neutral singlular pronoun, and I was very upset because I really wanted to use it to keep a character dark and mysterious. I'm so mad that nobody told me about singular they until I was an adult.
@DiamondAppendixVODs
@DiamondAppendixVODs 2 жыл бұрын
A very neat exploration of the topic, I didn't know the singular they had such a long history
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN 2 жыл бұрын
nice pfp
@airsmellnice4133
@airsmellnice4133 Жыл бұрын
​@@RichConnerGMN no
@amandasmith4089
@amandasmith4089 2 жыл бұрын
This is a solid video. My mind is blown learning that thon/thonself was used on the English language at a point in time. Love this kind of educational content!
@DatBisa
@DatBisa Жыл бұрын
Tom Scott put it great a while ago. "Some people are They. Get over it."
@ericrogers9263
@ericrogers9263 2 жыл бұрын
As a non-binary person, this video slays. Thanks for using your platform to promote awareness! Definitely going to send this to people so I don’t have to go through the emotional labor of explaining myself to everyone who hasn’t taken the time to learn about non-binary identities
@ventreal4292
@ventreal4292 2 жыл бұрын
its not a requirement for people to research non-binary whateverness on their own
@HGButte1991
@HGButte1991 2 жыл бұрын
@@ventreal4292 true, but it's also not neccessary to put down other people just because they don't conform to our expectations of gender. You never insult someone for who they are, that leads nowhere
@stm7810
@stm7810 2 жыл бұрын
@@ventreal4292 It's not peoples job to research alergies, disabilities, race, or any other form of human diversity, but if they don't show respect there's a long walk and a short peer right there for bigots.
@kcio3erene307
@kcio3erene307 2 жыл бұрын
@@stm7810 just dont even bother this person has been going to comment to comment to change ppls mind
@stm7810
@stm7810 2 жыл бұрын
@@kcio3erene307 well they suck at convincing people, where's the appeal to empathy or reason?
@shirknado7953
@shirknado7953 2 жыл бұрын
I wrote an essay in high school that is basically this video. Fantastic job
@gustavovillegas5909
@gustavovillegas5909 2 жыл бұрын
Love that ending line. I use they extensively, some older speakers have raised their eyebrows at it but it just feels natural to me
@daedalus7286
@daedalus7286 Жыл бұрын
Deeply funny that the people in the 1750’s arguing against the singular ‘they’ mirror the argument of those advocating today against people using singular ‘they’ to refer to themselves - in the 1750’s it was “basic grammar”, but nowadays the GC narrative is “basic biology” - both of which being argued with a generous dollop of ignorance towards more complex biology/grammar!
@Xnoob545
@Xnoob545 Жыл бұрын
"it's just basic biology" Yes it is basic biology That's because the talk about non-binary, intersex, etc. people is in advanced biology and you're too dumb to study it
@charliezard64
@charliezard64 Жыл бұрын
Biology and grammar are nor really comparable as all grammar is fabricated by humans and can be changed, biology is at least not the former, and therefore does not warrant an argument in the first place.
@NoOne-dj1ou
@NoOne-dj1ou 2 жыл бұрын
I'd argue that as long as your audience can consistently and easily understand what you mean, you don't need to worry about using grammatically correct language. After all, grammar is really only necessary to ensure that people understand each other.
@gaminggeckos4388
@gaminggeckos4388 2 жыл бұрын
Yup. The rules of the English language are descriptive, not prescriptive!
@cuminthesink
@cuminthesink 2 жыл бұрын
And this wins award of most sane and based comment in the comment section!!!!!!
@xcreeperbombx61
@xcreeperbombx61 2 жыл бұрын
Grammar has other uses too, like synonym rolls.
@GimOA
@GimOA 2 жыл бұрын
grammar is a must, pronouns is not obligatory.
@gaminggeckos4388
@gaminggeckos4388 2 жыл бұрын
@@GimOA Grammar changes with the times, though. We aren’t still using Old English. Rules change. And these ones already have.
@achb1854
@achb1854 2 жыл бұрын
i envy English for having an epicene pronoun, it makes gender-neutral speech so much easier. Another feature i wish my language would have is the ability to differentiate between an inclusive and exclusive „we“
@IPP133
@IPP133 2 жыл бұрын
As a western American, I differentiate between singular and plural you with y'all in informal settings. Big fan of y'all.
@angeldude101
@angeldude101 2 жыл бұрын
I instead propose to bring back thee/thou. They were only lost because people got too polite and stopped using the singular forms.
@IPP133
@IPP133 2 жыл бұрын
@@angeldude101 y'all is just so nice, tho!
@stm7810
@stm7810 2 жыл бұрын
Do the same everywhere, it's a legit useful word, we're also sometimes called y'all since we are plural.
@zapazap
@zapazap 2 жыл бұрын
@@angeldude101 When is "you" more polite than "thou"?
@angeldude101
@angeldude101 2 жыл бұрын
@@zapazap Originally? Whenever it referred to a single person. Thou and you had an analogous relation to French's tu and vous, where the plural (you or vous) would get used in singular contexts when being polite. In English (and supposedly in Spanish), this polite usage for so common that the original singular pronoun died out completely. Regarding Spanish, supposedly "vos" was originally their version of vous/you, and when their singular "tú" died out, "vosotros" was used to distinguish the plural, which basically was just y'all, it more precisely "you others."
@maxtube444
@maxtube444 7 ай бұрын
Hey, you prolly won’t see this, but this video helped me realise that I prefer they/them pronouns a couple months ago. Recently, due to thinking about that and my gender identity, I’ve come to the conclusion that I’m genderfluid. I wouldn’t have gone down that rabbit hole if not for this video, so thanks a lot.
@kklein
@kklein 7 ай бұрын
i'm so glad this video meant something to you ^^
@blibliobli7275
@blibliobli7275 3 ай бұрын
everybody is. no one is 100% any of the genders even if they claim so.
@thezipcreator
@thezipcreator 2 жыл бұрын
even if I know the gender of the person and they are masculine or feminine I still tend to use "they" a lot, it's just a nice word I like it. if I had my way we wouldn't even have gendered pronouns in english
@xcreeperbombx61
@xcreeperbombx61 2 жыл бұрын
One pronoun to rule them all
@colonelpopcorn7702
@colonelpopcorn7702 2 жыл бұрын
That is a good point about all of the various homophones and imprecision found in other languages in addition to English. It’s pretty easy to forget when looking at only your native language that human languages aren’t completely unambiguous. It can feel like the language you’re used to speaking has a lot less imprecision than you think it does simply since you’re used to using it
@barbs86
@barbs86 2 жыл бұрын
I came here expecting transphobia toward non-binary people. All I can say is that I love you for validating non-binary people as well as proving that they/them pronouns are used as singular in everyday language. You are an amazing person. Thank you.
@AbsolutelyAri1
@AbsolutelyAri1 2 жыл бұрын
Preach
@kklein
@kklein 2 жыл бұрын
it's pretty sad that transphobia is so widespread that you expect every video on the topic to be transphobic. I, too, am apprehensive before clicking on anything to do with enbies because transphobes are scary man. thank you for stopping by anyway and I'm glad you got something out of the video!
@hyeve3551
@hyeve3551 2 жыл бұрын
@@beyondhaircraze4418 Huh? When did anyone say either of those things? Besides, don't you think it's a lil' different to directly attack a person or group with hate messages, compared to making a joke about something that, as awful as it was, is well gone into the past by now?
@AbsolutelyAri1
@AbsolutelyAri1 2 жыл бұрын
@@beyondhaircraze4418 🛩🏢🏢 jokes make fun of a thing that already happened, but trans phobia is still an issue today so it's considered insensitive (I personally don't think 9/11 jokes are funny but that's just me)
@RichConnerGMN
@RichConnerGMN Жыл бұрын
@@hyeve3551 nice pfp
@SoraScatteredDreams-tk8yp
@SoraScatteredDreams-tk8yp Жыл бұрын
As a non-binary person myself, this is very validating to see more people validating the pronouns I and a lot of other non-binary and/or other gendered people use, thank you. ...now if I can only get my boomer texan father to understand singular they..
@aloe-aurora
@aloe-aurora Жыл бұрын
I hope you sent him this video. It's honestly perfect for those who want to argue "logic" or "history". This video covers those bases and then some!
@SoraScatteredDreams-tk8yp
@SoraScatteredDreams-tk8yp Жыл бұрын
@@Something_special0-0 a lot of other people are non-binary too; I mean I don't know how to explain it to ya, we just are. This is how we feel. That's all there is to it.
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