minor wording fixes

This commit is contained in:
Andrea Vos 2020-11-17 17:29:58 +01:00
parent f0da6924da
commit 489d71e24c
2 changed files with 3 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ faq:
{https://twitter.com/RebeccaRHelm/status/1207834357639139328=(more info here)}.
And when we get to the cultural aspect, “gender” is a social construct.
Depending on time and location being “a woman” or “a man” can mean having radically different
rights, duties, norms… In Europe men used to wear high heels and leggins
rights, duties, norms… In Europe men used to wear high heels and stockings
native peoples of North America have been recognising a third gender for centuries
{https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Two-Spirit=(two-spirit)}, etc. etc.
- >

View File

@ -196,12 +196,12 @@ english:
The main difference is that English has singular “they”,
while Polish doesn't yet have any normative form that would fit better.
That's why English “it” is niche,
while Polish neuter is one of the most popular choices among nonbinary,
while Polish neuter is one of the most popular choices among nonbinary people,
in hopes of normalising the new usage.
- >
There's one more issue with neuter, though: it is neutral in nominative (the “who?”),
but in other cases (the “whose?”, “whom?”, etc.) if falls back to being identical to masculine forms.
That's why some enbies mix up multiple forms, for instance using neuter verbs, yet feminine pronouns, etc.
That's why some enbies mix multiple forms, for instance using neuter verbs, yet feminine pronouns, etc.
table: {ono: 'Neutrative', ono/jej: 'Neutrative with female declension'}
-
name: 'Dukaisms'