Originally posted by kernelbogey
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Pedants' Paradise
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This is a sticky topic.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post'Themself' jars for me: I'd be inclined to write 'Each child feeds her- or himself', or possibly simply 'Each child feeds herself'.
"Each child feeds itself" is surely the most elegant way of expressing this idea. Or, alternatively, "every child feeds themselves".
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostPresumably only when the children in question are girls?
Originally posted by Sir Velo View Post"Each child feeds itself" is surely the most elegant way of expressing this idea. Or, alternatively, "every child feeds themselves".
'All children feed themselves' sounds right to me.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post...I wonder whether the German usage 'Man' (more or less the same as 'one') has come under any attack from feminist theory: anyone know?
"In German, a young lady has no sex, while a turnip has," the American writer Mark Twain once complained. "Think what overwrought reverence that shows for the turnip, and what callous disrespect for the girl."
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
I've long been vaguely surprised by another instance of a plural doing singular service - I've put it down as a 'media' affectation, but perhaps there's more to it. It seems to be a resurgence of the Royal 'we'...
It occurs when someone in the public eye describes their own actions using 'we'.
There is of course the singular 'we' (meaning 'you') traditionally used by school-masters -
"Well, ffotherington-Thomas, we seem to be having a little problem with that ink-well, don't we? Why don't we try removing the frog before dipping our pen in the ink-well?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post...There is of course the singular 'we' (meaning 'you') traditionally used by school-masters -
"Well, ffotherington-Thomas, we seem to be having a little problem with that ink-well, don't we? Why don't we try removing the frog before dipping our pen in the ink-well?
Perhaps Vinteuil's schoolboy might reply drily 'Yes sir, the frog is the problem; how kind of you to offer to remove him.'
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... also by old-school medical practitioners :
"Well, Mrs Gubbins, how are we this morning? And how are our water-works?"
Top hospital consultant (a James Robertson-Justice-type character one imagines) doing the rounds. "And how are we this morning, Mr Smith?" Mr Smith points at the tracheotomy tube in his throat. The consultant borrows nurse's notepad. On it he writes, "How are we this morning, Mr Smith?", then reaches over to hand it and the biro to the patient. The patient writes, "I'm not deaf".
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Forgot to check the latest Fowler:
"Over the centuries, writers of standing have used they, their and them with anaphoric reference to a singular pronoun or noun, and the practice has continued into the 21c. to the point that, traditional grammarians aside, such constructions are hardly noticed any more or are not widely felt to lie in a prohibited zone."It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostForgot to check the latest Fowler:
"Over the centuries, writers of standing have used they, their and them with anaphoric reference to a singular pronoun or noun, and the practice has continued into the 21c. to the point that, traditional grammarians aside, such constructions are hardly noticed any more or are not widely felt to lie in a prohibited zone."
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Originally posted by french frank View PostForgot to check the latest Fowler:
"Over the centuries, writers of standing have used they, their and them with anaphoric reference to a singular pronoun or noun, and the practice has continued into the 21c. to the point that, traditional grammarians aside, such constructions are hardly noticed any more or are not widely felt to lie in a prohibited zone."
2. In anaphoric reference to a singular noun or pronoun of undetermined gender: he or she.Especially in relation to a noun phrase involving one of the indefinite determiners or pronouns any, each, every, no, some, anybody, anyone, etc.
This use has sometimes been considered erroneous.
1968 Listener 3 Oct. 440/3 When somebody becomes prime minister they're immediately put on a pedestal.
1998 A. Pease & B. Pease Why Men don't listen & Women can't read Maps (1999) viii. 212 The psychiatric label for a transgender person is that they are suffering Gender Identity Disorder.
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