Odessa Dawn
Key Member
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2012
- Location
- Saudi Arabia
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Arabic
- Home Country
- Saudi Arabia
- Current Location
- Saudi Arabia
The difference is that American grammar books accept "you" as both singular and plural but don't (yet) accept "they" as both singular and plural. At least not any that I've seen. If you know of one, I'd love to hear about it.This is an example of the "singular they", which is an example of innovation (or evolution) of the English language to cope with the fact that there is no genderless third-person singular pronoun for use with people.
What were Oxford's editors thinking when they decided to forego marking quoted text in usage notes?
No, it's not. Folks have been arguing about it since the invention of arguing.This subject comes up regularly and, if I'm not mistaken, Barb D has reminded us on more than one occasion that this use of they is nothing new.
The first part of the usage note here attests to that. The last part of that same usage note is another matter.
The absence of quote demarcation could be a presentation issue where the Web view drops formatting present in the data. Do they follow the same ill-conceived practice in print editions?Just another of the many gripes I have with them. I could go on and on. A poor dictionary, in my opinion. Rant over.
The absence of quote demarcation could be a presentation issue where the Web view drops formatting present in the data. Do they follow the same ill-conceived practice in print editions?
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