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Using “they” to refer to a single person is about as old  as using “you” to refer to a single person: for example, Shakespeare  has a line “There's not a man I meet but doth salute me. As if I were  their well-acquainted friend”, and the Oxford English Dictionary has  citations for both going back to the 14th century. More recently, people  have also been using singular they to refer to a specific person, as in  “Alex left their umbrella”.

In this episode, your host Gretchen  McCulloch interviews Dr Kirby Conrod, a linguist who wrote their  dissertation about the syntax and sociolinguistics of singular they. We  talk about Kirby’s research comparing how people use third person  pronouns (like they, she, and he) in a way that conveys social  attitudes, like how some languages use formal and informal “you”,  specific versus generic singular they, and how people go about changing  their mental grammars for social reasons.

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For links to everything mentioned in this episode, go to lingthusiasm.com/post/61560086274…mmar-of-singular

Files

43: The grammar of singular they - Interview with Kirby Conrod by Lingthusiasm

Using "they" to refer to a single person is about as old as using "you" to refer to a single person: for example, Shakespeare has a line "There's not a man I meet but doth salute me. As if I were their well-acquainted friend", and the Oxford English Dictionary has citations for both going back to the 14th century.

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