From 07816fd34f53fa4760613fd12b17de18719deefc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrea Vos Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2020 23:53:54 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] [en][pronouns] aliases, order --- locale/en/pronouns/pronounGroups.tsv | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/locale/en/pronouns/pronounGroups.tsv b/locale/en/pronouns/pronounGroups.tsv index 1bd723992..75e555d7d 100644 --- a/locale/en/pronouns/pronounGroups.tsv +++ b/locale/en/pronouns/pronounGroups.tsv @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ name pronouns description Normative forms he,she It's worth mentioning that pronouns ≠ gender. One can still be nonbinary while using pronouns that are congruent with (or opposite to) their gender assigned at birth. Normative-ish forms they,it,one Those pronouns have been in common use in normative English already, but recently they got a slightly different new usage: describing a single, specific person. -Neopronouns e,ae,thon,co,ve,vi,xe,ey,per,hu,e/em/eir,ze,fae,zhe,ze/hir Unlike the other pronouns, which are officially recognised as “grammatically correct”, albeit used in a different meaning than we're used to, neopronouns are novel. Not being included in dictionaries doesn't make them any worse, though! +Neopronouns ae,co,e,e/em/es,ey,fae,hu,per,thon,ve,vi,xe,ze,ze/zir,zhe Unlike the other pronouns, which are officially recognised as “grammatically correct”, albeit used in a different meaning than we're used to, neopronouns are novel. Not being included in dictionaries doesn't make them any worse, though!