diff --git a/locale/en/translations.suml b/locale/en/translations.suml
index c49d28e09..e7fecddb2 100644
--- a/locale/en/translations.suml
+++ b/locale/en/translations.suml
@@ -421,6 +421,33 @@ faq:
Respecting other people's pronouns and identity doesn't require much effort.
Even if you're a person that's solving the biggest challenges that humanity is facing,
you can easily manage to not be transphobic in the process.
+ why-two-forms:
+ question: 'Why are pronouns usually given as two forms, like “she/her”, instead of just saying “she” or instead of listing all the forms?'
+ answer:
+ - >
+ In English there are five forms of gendered personal pronouns, so if we wanted to be precise,
+ we'd need to list all of them, for example: “they/them/their/theirs/themselves” or “he/him/his/his/himself”.
+ That's already a lot to put in your bio or introduce yourself with, and some languages require way more info than that
+ (eg. in Polish {https://zaimki.pl/jak-dzia%C5%82aj%C4%85-zaimki=there are up to 12 forms of gendered personal pronouns alone},
+ plus different endings of nouns, adjectives and verbs).
+ But usually not all of that information is necessary in those situations,
+ the whole pronoun set could be easily “compressed” to just a “she” or “he” or “xe”, etc.
+ - >
+ On the other hand though, reducing it to just one form won't have the advantage of adding extra context.
+ If a person sees just a “ve” in someone's bio and they're not familiar with the neopronoun “{/ve=ve/ver}”,
+ they will struggle to understand the meaning of that random “ve”.
+ But it became pretty much a standard convention that “xxx/yyy” means a pronoun set –
+ so there's a big chance that upon seeing “ve/ver” they'll know immediately that those are the person's pronouns.
+ - >
+ Adding a second (or sometimes third) form also clears up some ambiguities,
+ eg. between {/ze/hir=ze/hir} and {/ze/zir=ze/zir} or between {/e/em/eir=e/em/eir} and {/e/em/es=e/em/es}.
+ - >
+ Basically, the two-forms convention is a compromise between keeping it brief
+ and making it very obvious that a given string of characters is a pronoun set,
+ and it also keeps things unambiguous.
+ This convention became so popular that it made its way into other languages
+ (although not strictly, for example in Portuguese people usually give three forms)
+ and we even incorporated the ( / )
into {/logo=our logo}.
flags:
question: 'Can you add this flag? Can you remove that flag?'
answer: