Ok so i learned about a person coming out as non binary recently and this reminded me of my confusion about (i think they’re called rolling pronouns) she/they and he/they specifically.

I have looked around at some sites speaking to it but none of them have made it clear to me whether use of “her” or “him” instead of “theirs” in the case of someone who wishes for (s)he/they is misgendering.

I had (mis)understood before that (s)he/they meant they were fine with either their gendered pronoun AND the gender free option, but am i way off base? Is the “they” not an option?

Apologies if this is breaking rules or has been answered, i didn’t see anything on the sidebar so here goes nothin…

  • YearOfTheCommieDesktop [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    9 months ago

    To my knowledge, it is common for she/they to mean “either she/her/hers or they/them/theirs is fine”.

    If a person tells you that they prefer one or the other, want you to use both in a rolling fashion, or some other specific arrangement like “he/them/his” then you should respect it, but in my experience that isn’t normally expected just from saying “she/they” or “he/they”.

    It’s also the case that some people use he/they or she/they because they want to go by she or he but aren’t confident in their presentation and so they kind of give people an “out” by having they in there (not saying this is everyone, just that I’ve known a couple people like that). If you get that impression it might color your choice of what pronoun to pick, but its not really on you to suss that out

    • the_post_of_tom_joad [any, any]@hexbear.netOP
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      9 months ago

      Ok, thank you for this. I was worried that i was missing something simple that nonetheless was over my head. So it’s not necessarily wrong to use (s)he instead of they unless corrected by the person. and it seems I’m not going to get people hurt by using the prophet gender possesive

    • beef_curds [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      9 months ago

      It’s also the case that some people use he/they or she/they because they want to go by she or he but aren’t confident in their presentation and so they kind of give people an “out” by having they in there

      I think there’s the inverse too, where some nonbinary people prefer they but aren’t bothered by he or she, and just include he/she because people are more likely to use he or she because of their presentation.

  • Infamousblt [any]@hexbear.net
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    9 months ago

    In my experience it depends on the person, and that person may change their mind at any time. For instance I know someone who prefers they if they look more enby or she if they look more fem (based on dress or makeup or even what they’re doing at that time). I know someone who goes by she/they but they want me to call them they (because they know I can do it) but are okay with strangers or acquaintances calling them she. I know someone who is “anything but she” and also someone who is “anything but he.” I know someone who is “not they” … so she is good with she but he is also good with he, just not they (this human is an absolute agent of chaos). Most of these people have changed their feelings about their pronouns and/or how they feel about their relationship with gender at least once in the time I’ve known them, and usually they just inform me and I adjust.

    So basically I just ask what is preferred if I can, most folks have a preference even if its slight. If they don’t I use whatever feels natural. If they have their pronouns labeled somehow like an email or a nametag I use the first one they have listed. If I don’t know them and there isn’t clear context and nobody has told me and I haven’t had the opportunity to ask, I use they until I am informed otherwise. I still get it wrong sometimes and apologize and try to get it right next time.

    I’m curious to see what others think as well. Gender is a constant journey for a lot of people and I think it’s neat. But basically to succinctly answer, I think it probably depends on the person. At least that’s how it has been in all the spaces I’m in.

    • the_post_of_tom_joad [any, any]@hexbear.netOP
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      9 months ago

      Ah thanks. I guess asking is always the correct answer! i was thinking more about how one goes about referencing those that you can not ask i.e. people you read about online or in the news. I think I’ll be a tiny bit more confident going forward, thank you.

      • Infamousblt [any]@hexbear.net
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        9 months ago

        If you can’t ask and you don’t have a way to know, I’d just use either they or whatever they put first if they do have them listed. I have known 3 people in my life who were “she” and then “she/they” and then “they/she” and then are now just “they”, kinda a comfort thing for them. They start out trying they, realize they like it enough that they want it to be primary, and then eventually are just like fuck it I don’t need the she anymore. So it helps to ask and be okay with being corrected since I think it’s rare that someone instantly fully understands their gender now and forever, for a lot of folks it’s a more fluid thing.

  • AutomatedPossum [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    9 months ago

    Some people are completely fine with all possible uses and combinations and you can just use whatever you feel like. Some are kinda fine with both, but actually do have a preference and view the second pronoun as a compromise that’s ok-ish when they’re around random cis people they don’t want to give a ted talk about the complexities of their gender to. Some will want you to use both sets of pronouns alternatingly (“she asked me to come over, but i was busy, so i asked them if we could postpone”). Some (especially genderfluid) people will have a preference that varies over time and may have markers like a pronoun pin or clothing choice to signal which pronouns they go with at a given time, like she / her when in drag and he / him when in masc-coded casual clothes.

    The tl;dr is that you really can’t generalize what something like she / they means in practice and that you should just ask the person.

    Edit: Also when people are out just recently, it’s possible they’re trying out which pronouns work best for them. In that case, it may be a good thing to help them get a feel for both by using both pronouns in different situations and, if you’re close enough, asking them after a while if they’re still using both sets of pronouns. A lot of people make the experience of introducing themselves with, say “they / he” and everybody just he / hims them 100% of the time, and in that case particularly, i’d ask how that person feels about this when some time has passed and there’s a good opportunity. Such choices do not always work out as intended, and people can and do change their minds about the fine print when exploring their gender.

    • JohnBrownNote [comrade/them, des/pair]@hexbear.net
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      9 months ago

      Some will want you to use both sets of pronouns alternatingly (“she asked me to come over, but i was busy, so i asked them if we could postpone”)

      that sounds exhausting both to insist on and understand compliant usage of

      -someone who doesn’t bother with “they” irl because it’s so burdensome to tell and correct other people

        • the_post_of_tom_joad [any, any]@hexbear.netOP
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          9 months ago

          I dunno if it’s too much, but it is new and until it’s not, kinda difficult not to make a mistake. I am pleased to learn from commenters here that the consensus seems to be that one won’t offend if one makes an honest effort to call someone what they want.

      • aaro [they/them, she/her]@hexbear.net
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        9 months ago

        Asking for someone to swap a word like “she” for a word like “they” is a completely reasonable accommodation because both of those words are the same difficulty. Asking for someone to swap a word like “she” for any of a set of options that is governed by a rule that requires memorization and real-time alternation is not only much more difficult, but is kind of an ableist demand to make of those with speech impediments, cognitive disabilities, and/or non-native English speakers.

        • JohnBrownNote [comrade/them, des/pair]@hexbear.net
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          9 months ago

          i meant that it makes sequential sentences harder to understand when reading or listening. like the occasional singular-plural ambiguity with “they” but much more severe since you’re using multiple different pronouns to refer to the same subject when normally (and unlike they, where we had an informal singular all along), changing pronouns heavily implies changing subject. Someone who feels really strongly about being referred to with rolling pronouns like that should write a book or long poem using several of them that seems like it’s about multiple people but is actually about one. “art” heads would eat that shit up.

          also, i’m not so sure that conjugation is the same mental process as word substitution, but that field isn’t my expertise.