T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1027.1 | | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Tue Feb 23 1993 10:00 | 20 |
| There is such an invented word, the indeclinable "ir."
The Manager of the shop has to cash up at the end of day. Ir
also has to record the cash tally in the log book.
Or perhaps...
Ir told ir that ir hair was ugly.
Some people will go incredible lengths to be politically correct. In
the Curmudgeon's Dictionary, I find the following reactionary view:
-person, n. A suffix sometimes substituted for `man' in words such
as `chairman' and `draftsman' as a sop to certain weak-minded
feminists who, having little or no self-assurance, require
continual reminders that they are not members of the race of Man.
Also used as a prefix, often with results disastrous to
communication: e.g., personhood for manhood.
-dick
|
1027.2 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Feb 23 1993 10:10 | 6 |
| I refuse to use "he or she" or any of the other nonsense that's supposed
to be PC. If I want to avoid offending people who are upset by this
kind of stuff, I rephrase it, e.g.
The Manager of the shop has to cash up at the end of day and
record the cash tally in the log book.
|
1027.3 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Feb 23 1993 10:48 | 8 |
|
>>I refuse to use "he or she" or any of the other nonsense that's supposed
>>to be PC. If I want to avoid offending people who are upset by this
>>kind of stuff, I rephrase it, e.g.
Hear, hear. It's ridiculous.
|
1027.4 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Tue Feb 23 1993 12:25 | 7 |
|
Jon,
I direct your attention to topic 147. Some have argued that the word
you are looking for is "they."
JP
|
1027.5 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Tue Feb 23 1993 19:32 | 5 |
| The construction s/he has been used by some midrange people
(i.e. slightly more respectable than PC :-)
It has also been suggested that a single acronym should be formed
from all three third-person singulars, she, he, and it.
|
1027.6 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Feb 23 1993 23:26 | 10 |
| re: .1 and indeclinable "ir".
It is usually spelt "er", but
'Er told 'er that 'er 'air was ugly.
is normal Devon dialect, and the "'er" is undoubtably feminine gender.
The corresponding "'e" (masculine) has only a genitive.
'E told 'e that 'is 'air was ugly.
There is also "un" which is used in a similar way. Maybe that could
be a candidate. I will check with my wife.
|
1027.7 | Not quite comfortable yet :-( | KERNEL::MORRIS | Which universe did you dial? | Wed Feb 24 1993 05:14 | 29 |
| OK - let's examine the evidence for the prosecution:
re: .1
Thank you for the information about`ir'. I have not come across this
invention before - whence came it? (or should that be they?)
re: .2
Ah, but simply conjoining the sentence has limits. What if I had a
fourteen line paragraph with 11 sentences. Would you join them all
together? Would you join some and repeat `The Manager' at the
beginning of each of the remaining longer sentences? Isn't it easier
to have a pronoun (perhaps `ir')?
re: .4
Thanks. I have looked at 147.2, 147.5, 155.0, 155.3 and remain
unconvinced. Each of the examples seems to relate to an impersonal
noun (each, nobody, somebody). I still feel the need for a more
personal but genderless pronoun which is specifically singular.
Perhaps this speaks more of my grammatical pedantry than anything else.
re: several
This is not sought through political correctness, but rather in an
effort to construct less clumsy sentences without being offensive.
Jon
|
1027.8 | I don't feel the need | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | Human. All too human. | Wed Feb 24 1993 05:49 | 10 |
| I either write around it or I use she/her/hers for the neutral. I've
been doing this since about 1971 and that unexpected female actor
really hits you in the eye.
When I mentioned this to Frank McGowan, he said he did the same thing:
"400 years of he/him/his followed by 400 years of she/her/hers and then
we can straighten it out."
Using they is cool too.
|
1027.9 | | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Wed Feb 24 1993 06:04 | 17 |
| Re .7
> This is not sought through political correctness, but rather in an
> effort to construct less clumsy sentences without being offensive.
Being not offensive is the entire essence of political correctness.
Reis aliis
Using "they/their/them" is not cool. "They/their/them" is the
third-person PLURAL set of pronouns. I have *some* standards yet; I
will not adopt the ungrammatical usages of others simply as an escape
from being PI. Long before I will descend to such obviously incorrect
mixing of number, I will work with "he or she" or other variants, or I
will recast the sentence to avoid the pronoun.
-dick
|
1027.10 | From this day forth... | FROST::W_PIPER | bill piper 266-4393 | Wed Feb 24 1993 07:55 | 6 |
| Just declare that "he" and "him", etc., _are_ the genderless pronouns,
then make up new ones to replace them (if you still think it necessary).
In one fell swoop, all existing references to "he" become gender-neutral,
and you won't have to modify any speech or writing habits.
-piper
|
1027.11 | Tom, didn't The Shadows of Them record "Gloria" in '65? | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Nice imagery but a little gruesome | Wed Feb 24 1993 09:19 | 11 |
| "One" in formal dress, "you" in casual wear.
"They", "their", and "them" are cool in my book, and a lot of others
published from the Renaissance through the 20th century. Your tough
luck if the one book you use to write by disagrees.
I'm also fond of using "she" and "her" since my idealized fuzzy shadow
reader out there looks vaguely feminine. But for the most part I go
with the vaguely moblike fuzzy shadow of "them".
Ray
|
1027.12 | Tom, didn't the Damons of Knight record... | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Nice imagery but a little gruesome | Wed Feb 24 1993 09:36 | 6 |
| I don't condone this but Damon Knight always uses "yeye". Personally I
find that a little too bright and bouncy for a pronoun. Pronouns
should be drab gray or khaki so that one can deal with them before
one's morning coffee.
Rayay
|
1027.13 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Feb 24 1993 11:33 | 6 |
| re .7:
> Ah, but simply conjoining the sentence has limits.
Indeed. I said I'd rephrase. In your example, conjoining worked fine.
In other examples, I'd do it another way.
|
1027.14 | It was the Damons of Pythias, Ray | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | Human. All too human. | Thu Feb 25 1993 05:48 | 5 |
| Re: .10 "declaring he and him neutral"
This is the situation that currently obtains, but many feel that
neutrality is not being genuinely maintained.
|
1027.15 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Thu Feb 25 1993 16:01 | 6 |
| In fact, in a note in this conference, someone already posted
Douglas Hofstadter's article sarcastically declaring "white"
to be neutral (in words such as chairwhite, whitekind, etc.).
And someone else already didn't get the point.....
-- Norman Diamond
|
1027.16 | From the cobwebs of my mind... | BITBKT::FORBES | DEC Realtime Integrator BU | Sat Mar 06 1993 12:06 | 13 |
| I seem to recall this having been discussed in some other note in this
conference (beside 147 and 155) - but I don't have the patience to go
looking...
My recollection is that "cos" was suggested by someone as an alternative. Is
this familiar to anyone here?
Also, I believe that one can take the use of "you" as a 2nd person singular
pronoun to be a precedent for using "they" for the 3rd person singular. That
is, isn't it true that "you" was originally reserved for plural usage,
whereas "thou" was the singular form?
Bill
|
1027.17 | 8-} | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Sun Mar 07 1993 16:02 | 15 |
| G'day,
We are looking for a 'he/she' replacement. Since 'he' is not 'she',
this implies that there are more persons than one (from which one will
be selected) who are elegible for inclusion, and hence 'he/she' is
plural. 'They' and 'their' are therefore acceptable.
The Manager ..... . They should ensure a balance in their accounts....
derek
|
1027.18 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Sun Mar 07 1993 18:41 | 6 |
| Re .16
>Also, I believe that one can take the use of "you" as a 2nd person singular
>pronoun to be a precedent for using "they" for the 3rd person singular.
We agree with you.
|
1027.19 | Hoist by their own petard? | KERNEL::MORRIS | Which universe did you dial? | Mon Mar 08 1993 01:50 | 5 |
| re .18
Well now, you may agree with them but is they right? ;-)
Jon
|
1027.20 | | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Mon Mar 08 1993 06:10 | 6 |
| Fowler declares that the use of "they" for a single person is
unacceptable to grammarians despite its hoary history.
I think that people who are reluctant to stand up to the PC movement
and use singular pronouns are chicken, and hence the use of the plural
in loco singularis is fowl.
|
1027.21 | How old is Fowler? | MOPUS::ROBERTS | | Mon Mar 08 1993 10:06 | 13 |
| Well, I wish that there were such a pronoun, and my wish has *nothing*
to do with the PC movement. I found myself wishing for such a thing
when I was a technical writer, *decades* ago. It was commonplace in
that particular company to refer to programmers, managers, or engineers
as "he" but clerks, tellers, secretaries as "she". This sort of thing
makes one suspect that the "he" doesn't include the idea of "she" in
most people's minds.
But, of course, the language can never change because grammarians don't
like change. 8^) But grammarians eventually die; the language goes
on.
-ellie
|
1027.22 | My edition of Fowler is dated 1965. | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Mon Mar 08 1993 10:26 | 20 |
| For technical writing, you have two easy alternatives. Address the
text to the second person, or use nouns:
"It is a good idea to include comments in your shell scripts.
Comments help you remember what the script does and how to use
it..."
- The Big Gray Book: The Next Step with ULTRIX
"MAIL
If this parameter is set to the name of a mail file and the MAIL-
PATH parameter is not set, the shell informs the user of the
arrival of mail in the specified file."
- sh5(1) manpage
There's always a way, and usually it can even be written to appear
reasonably graceful.
-dick
|
1027.23 | "Funeral by funeral, theory advances." | MOPUS::ROBERTS | | Mon Mar 08 1993 12:30 | 17 |
| Yes, you are right that things can be rewritten, and in the instances
you give, there's not a lot of difficulty. It is bit more cumbersome
in other instances. The case I had in mind was a requirements
description in which phrases like "the teller/clerk/secretary will do
<foo> and then she will do <foo>.
But how to rewrite it wasn't the point. The point is that there is
evidence that this change was happening "in the field" before the PC
people came up with the idea. I admit it's not a graceful
construction. Since we learned the words "they" and "them" only as
plural forms, it is jarring to have them used as singular pronouns. But
it may well happen that these words will come to have both senses, like
"you" as time goes by. If this extra meaning becomes common, I think
the construction could become standard, because then it will not have
the contradiction in number that's so jarring now.
-ellie
|
1027.24 | If they use it, it'll become the default. | VMSMKT::KENAH | There are no mistakes in Love... | Mon Mar 08 1993 12:33 | 5 |
| If "they" is to become the default impersonal pronoun, it will,
regardless of what the "PC" folks say. Usage determines the
evolution of language; very little else has any impact whatsoever.
andrew
|
1027.25 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Mon Mar 08 1993 16:40 | 6 |
| >If "they" is to become the default impersonal pronoun, it will,
Don't you mean this:
If "they" are to become the default impersonal pronoun, they will...
Fowler are obsolete.
|
1027.26 | Okay, here it is. | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Tue Mar 09 1993 06:41 | 12 |
| What's wrong with "one" then? "One" is a time-honored form without
gender, and it (or its sense) appears in languages other than English.
French, for example, has "on" which means the same things:
On dit qu'il pleut. "They" say it's raining.
On ne fait pas �a. "One" does not do that.
W9NCD includes "one" as "a member of a vaguely defined group: anyone at
all," and Fowler specifically refers to it as an "indefinite, or
impersonal, pronoun."
-dick
|
1027.27 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Mar 09 1993 07:35 | 2 |
| "One" sounds stuffy, at least to Americans. It's the lingo of etiquette
authorities.
|
1027.28 | one on "one" | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Mar 09 1993 08:23 | 23 |
|
>>"One" sounds stuffy, at least to Americans. It's the lingo of etiquette
>>authorities.
Please, make that _some_ Americans.
Dick, I had thought of "one" too, but it seems better suited as a
substitute for the first or second person than for the third.
In the example given in .0, one would still have to rephrase
in order to use "one", I believe.
>>The Manager of the shop has to cash up at the end of day. It
>>also has to record the cash tally in the log book.
It wouldn't sound right to say "One also has to..." in this
case. It could be worded "As manager of the shop, one has to
cash up at the end of the day and record the cash tally in
the log book.", but I thought the base note author was after
a true substitute.
Diane
|
1027.29 | Argh! | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Tue Mar 09 1993 08:55 | 18 |
| Oh, good grief, Diane! Using "one" for first or second person is a
*real* bag of worms; the false first-personal "one" is so stuffy as to
require Allerest: "One just doesn't think the weather is suited to
strolling today."
Your example of "one" as a first- or second-person pronoun is weak,
methinks:
> In the example given in .0, one would still have to rephrase
> in order to use "one", I believe.
A perfectly valid interpretation for this is either "you would
still..." or "the writer would still..." The latter is more formal,
less conversational; but it is clearly a third-person usage. Can you
provide an example that uses "one" in first or second person that is
both not stuffy and unequivocal about person?
-dick
|
1027.30 | tailor made response | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Mar 09 1993 09:23 | 22 |
|
>>Oh, good grief, Diane! Using "one" for first or second person is a
>>*real* bag of worms
Good grief? Dick, you cut me to the quick. 8^) I didn't say it
wasn't a bag of worms when used in the first or second person,
I just said I didn't think it was well suited for use as a direct
substitute for a third-person pronoun.
It can sound stuffy, but it doesn't always.
>>Your example of "one" as a first- or second-person pronoun is weak,
>>methinks:
I wasn't using it in that sentence as an example, surprisingly
enough. Merely a coincidence.
>>Can you
>>provide an example that uses "one" in first or second person that is
>>both not stuffy and unequivocal about person?
One would hope so.
|
1027.31 | Nope. No cigar. | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Tue Mar 09 1993 10:33 | 9 |
| "One would hope so." --> "It is to be hoped."
This usage is essentially the same as the example I gave:
"Could one refuse?" --> "Was refusal to be exercised?"
Semantically, both are impersonal, and hence third-person, usages.
Next? :-)
|
1027.32 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Mar 09 1993 10:46 | 11 |
|
Okay, Dick. I'll be happy to acquiesce. Let's say that
it's _always_ used in the third person. Fine. Marvelous. 8^)
However, that doesn't change the fact that it cannot be
substituted for "he", "she", etc. in every situation
without wordsmithing. Will you at least grant that that
is true?
|
1027.33 | | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Unintelligiblets | Tue Mar 09 1993 11:34 | 8 |
| OK, Dick & Diane...
Now that you've both had your say in this, of questions I have but one --
Who one?
:-)
|
1027.34 | | SMURF::BINDER | Homo unus sum, non homines omnes. | Tue Mar 09 1993 13:03 | 5 |
| Dan,
No one one. Why do you oneder?
-dick
|
1027.35 | One of the lost ones | RAGMOP::T_PARMENTER | Human. All too human. | Thu Mar 18 1993 07:09 | 4 |
| There's always Fats Waller's observation:
"One never knows, do one?"
|