I adamantly do the same. I refuse to use he/she or (s)he or the singular they, defiantly continuing with the generic "he" and using "people" instead of "someone" so I don't have to pair the latter with "they."
I say "invitation" and "request" instead of using invite and ask as nouns. I still say "contact" instead of "reach out" ... you …
I adamantly do the same. I refuse to use he/she or (s)he or the singular they, defiantly continuing with the generic "he" and using "people" instead of "someone" so I don't have to pair the latter with "they."
I say "invitation" and "request" instead of using invite and ask as nouns. I still say "contact" instead of "reach out" ... you get the picture. Not all of these are enclave but they're part of the "warmth" defilement of the language that I refuse to go along with.
Since I do a lot of technical writing I dread that the time may come when an employer tells me to use "they" because I know what my answer will be.
The "woman" thing is a scent-mark like "Trump won." Well, I'm not a member of the pack.
I adamantly do the same. I refuse to use he/she or (s)he or the singular they, defiantly continuing with the generic "he" and using "people" instead of "someone" so I don't have to pair the latter with "they."
I say "invitation" and "request" instead of using invite and ask as nouns. I still say "contact" instead of "reach out" ... you get the picture. Not all of these are enclave but they're part of the "warmth" defilement of the language that I refuse to go along with.
Since I do a lot of technical writing I dread that the time may come when an employer tells me to use "they" because I know what my answer will be.
The "woman" thing is a scent-mark like "Trump won." Well, I'm not a member of the pack.