What is wrong with using they?Just use "It" and drop the "they" for the love of god.
The other group can use It and This.
Singular they has become controversial because of trans people using it as a pronoun. People incorrectly insist any use of singular they is wrong now, even if not related to that topic, despite it's usage being older than any of us.What is wrong with using they?
I have never said it's wrong, and I have never pointed out controversy about it. I am and for the most part used to the "It" and not "They". I'm not from U.S. as to make an issue about LGBT people. I'm used to "it" because I don't use "they" in an irl conversation and I don't go towards people and ask about their pet "Is they ok being patted?" and then confuse the pet owner.Singular they has become controversial because of trans people using it as a pronoun. People incorrectly insist any use of singular they is wrong now, even if not related to that topic, despite it's usage being older than any of us.
Which is why you'd go "Are they ok being patted" instead, which works just fine. It's just a bit silly to disregard a whole word when it works here.I have never said it's wrong, and I have never pointed out controversy about it. I am and for the most part used to the "It" and not "They". I'm not from U.S. as to make an issue about LGBT people. I'm used to "it" because I don't use "they" in an irl conversation and I don't go towards people and ask about their pet "Is they ok being patted?" and then confuse the pet owner.
For most of the world they are still used for multiple people, so it's quite jarring.What is wrong with using they?
What Alphay1 said.I have never said it's wrong, and I have never pointed out controversy about it. I am and for the most part used to the "It" and not "They". I'm not from U.S. as to make an issue about LGBT people. I'm used to "it" because I don't use "they" in an irl conversation and I don't go towards people and ask about their pet "Is they ok being patted?" and then confuse the pet owner.
It's a dragon that we're talking about, not a person. You use it to refer to an object, animal, or other thing that has already been mentioned.What Alphay1 said.
But also...
"It" is a very demeaning pronoun among Americans.
Why?
Because being referred to as an "It" lowers your status to being a mere object. "It" means you are a thing with no identity. Something that is used and ultimately discarded.
Google "A Child Called It" and you'll see what I mean about the dehumanization. And fucking brace yourself for some seriously triggering shit.
a single dog, so I use "are" and "they" for it?Which is why you'd go "Are they ok being patted" instead, which works just fine. It's just a bit silly to disregard a whole word when it works here.
I'll admit, I've legit never heard of singular they being a problem for anybody outside of trans drama, that's why I assumed this was the case.
It's a dragon that we're talking about, not a person. You use it to refer to an object, animal, or other thing that has already been mentioned.
sigh, I'm not trying to complicate things here. I'm just saying that since the MC doesn't know the gender of the dragon, the most ideal thing I would know to use is "it". I'm not saying to deny an animal it's personhood and i'm not here to talk about animal rights and what not. I'm here to talk about grammars and how most readers would read the manga. I get what you're saying and i'm not denying your opinion. I'm only here to plead that they use "it" rather than "they" in that part so as to not make it jarring for us readers.Species does not deny personhood. This is why we have laws about animal rights. For example, I'd only refer to cetaceans as animals in the most technical sense, the same way I'd refer to human beings as animals. Spend more than five minutes hanging around an orca. You won't ever think of them as "just an animal" afterwards. Same as with most dogs. Only an idiot thinks dogs don't have thoughts of their own. They may be simplistic and child like, but you won't catch me saying that a dog isn't a person.
not in this usageSingular They is perhaps not as common to some people. But it is still a correct usage. It appeared in English language since 1375.
Then explain yourself.not in this usage
Non-specific: "Any employee using the bathroom must wash their hands before returning to work."Then explain yourself.