From 1ed7fa7c4c1fbe3b62ba4c745fb2037ddbbc81e9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrea Vos Date: Sun, 6 Dec 2020 13:12:50 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] [en] neopronouns header --- 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 8a758c6ee..f14ab1d87 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,they/them/themself,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 ae,co,e,e/em/es,ey,fae,hu,ne,per,s/he,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! +Neopronouns ae,co,e,e/em/es,ey,fae,hu,ne,per,s/he,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! Some neoprouns' names are derived from the names of their creators.