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On Fri, 17 May 2024 22:00:06 -0400, RhinoOur masculine neuter pronoun was blamed as contributing to women's lower standing in society. I, otoh, suspect that their lower standing arose from more concrete biological factors, and would as readily have been blamed on a *feminine* neuter pronoun if that's what we'd had instead.
<no_offline_contact@example.com> wrote:
On Thu, 16 May 2024 09:08:39 -0700I just finished reading "What's Your Pronoun" by Dennis Baron
anim8rfsk <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:
>shawn <nanoflower@notforg.m.a.i.l.com> wrote:>On Wed, 15 May 2024 23:08:20 -0700, The Horny Goat <lcraver@home.ca>>
wrote:
On Thu, 16 May 2024 01:00:19 +0000, BTR1701>
<no_email@invalid.invalid> wrote:
A California school district has settled a lawsuit with a teacherWas she fired because she refused to use he/her or he/her/god knows
who says she was fired over her religious beliefs after she
refused to use students' preferred pronouns, attorneys say.
>
The Jurupa Unified School District in Riverside County agreed to
pay $360,000 to Jessica Tapia, her attorneys at Advocates for
Faith & Freedom said in a May 14 news release.
>
The settlement closes a federal lawsuit Tapia filed last May that
alleged the district's decision to fire Tapia violated her civil
and 1st Amendment rights, according to the lawsuit.
what?
I am an Attack Helicopter and shall henceforth be referred to as
such. I can remember when this pronoun discussion first started up
many years ago. People deriding it often said they should be
referred to as attack helicopters henceforth instead of he or she.
My question is of course designed to see if her "crime" was the
same one that brought Jordan Peterson to prominence or something
else? (Peterson said he'd use he/her as desired but wouldn't use a
made up pronoun)
But “attack helicopter” isn’t pronouns
>
Neither is "xir" but I've seen it in print, used as if it is a real
pronoun.
https://nvdplib.ca.iiivega.com/search?query=pronouns&searchType=everything&pageSize=10
which gives all sorts of pre-20th century attempts to popularize 3rd
person gender-free pronouns using made up words.
Surprisingly the book's index DOESN'T mention Jordan Peterson since
what brought him to prominence in the first place was his statement
that while he'd use any pronoun he was asked to as long as it was a
real word, he WOULDN'T use a made up word and he'd be damned if
anybody tried to force him to do so.
Both 'xir' and 'zir' have been used the way you suggest but neither
ever caught on.
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