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minor wording fixes
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@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ faq:
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{https://twitter.com/RebeccaRHelm/status/1207834357639139328=(more info here)}.
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And when we get to the cultural aspect, “gender” is a social construct.
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Depending on time and location being “a woman” or “a man” can mean having radically different
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rights, duties, norms… In Europe men used to wear high heels and leggins
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rights, duties, norms… In Europe men used to wear high heels and stockings
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native peoples of North America have been recognising a third gender for centuries
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{https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Two-Spirit=(two-spirit)}, etc. etc.
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- >
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@ -196,12 +196,12 @@ english:
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The main difference is that English has singular “they”,
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while Polish doesn't yet have any normative form that would fit better.
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That's why English “it” is niche,
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while Polish neuter is one of the most popular choices among nonbinary,
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while Polish neuter is one of the most popular choices among nonbinary people,
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in hopes of normalising the new usage.
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- >
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There's one more issue with neuter, though: it is neutral in nominative (the “who?”),
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but in other cases (the “whose?”, “whom?”, etc.) if falls back to being identical to masculine forms.
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That's why some enbies mix up multiple forms, for instance using neuter verbs, yet feminine pronouns, etc.
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That's why some enbies mix multiple forms, for instance using neuter verbs, yet feminine pronouns, etc.
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table: {ono: 'Neutrative', ono/jej: 'Neutrative with female declension'}
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-
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name: 'Dukaisms'
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