Categories
Crossword Clues

Gender-neutral pronoun

We will be glad to help and assist you in finding the crossword clues for the following clue: Gender-neutral pronoun.
looking at this crossword definition, it has 22 letters.
for better and easier way of searching the for a crossword clue, try using the search term “Gender-neutral pronoun crossword” or “Gender-neutral pronoun crossword clue” while searching and trying to find help in finishing your crosswords. Here are the possible answers for Gender-neutral pronoun.

We hope you found what you needed!
If you are still unsure with some definitions, don’t hesitate to search for them here in our site using the search box on top.

Possible Answers:

THEM.

Last seen on: –Vox Crossword Wednesday, 5 July 2023
The Atlantic Sunday, 14 May 2023 Crossword Answers
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Apr 21 2023
The Atlantic Sunday, January 22, 2023 Crossword Answers
USA Today Crossword – Dec 20 2022

Random information on the term “Gender-neutral pronoun”:

Epicenity is the lack of gender distinction, often reducing the emphasis on the masculine to allow the feminine. It includes androgyny – having both masculine and feminine characteristics. The adjective gender-neutral may describe epicenity (and both terms are associated with the terms gender-neutral language, gender-neutral pronoun, gender-blind, and unisex).

In linguistics, an epicene word has the same form for male and for female referents. In some cases, the term common gender is also used,[citation needed] but should not be confused with common or appellative as a contrary to proper (as in proper noun).In English, for example, the epicene (or common) nouns cousin and violinist can refer to a man or a woman, and so can the epicene (or common) pronoun one. The noun stewardess and the third-person singular pronouns he[citation needed] and she on the other hand are not epicene (or common).

In languages with grammatical gender, the term epicene can be used in two distinct situations:

Gender-neutral pronoun on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “THEM”:

Them (stylized in all lowercase) is a novel by Joyce Carol Oates, the third in the Wonderland Quartet she inaugurated with A Garden of Earthly Delights. It was published by Vanguard in 1969 and it won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction in 1970.

Many years and many awards later, Oates surmised that them and Blonde (2000) were the works she will most be remembered for, and would most want a new reader to select, though she added that “I could as easily have chosen a number of titles.”

In the book’s foreword, Oates writes that them is based for the most part upon the life of a real family. The main character, “Maureen Wendall,” contacted Oates by mail after she had failed a college course taught by the author, and these letters are included (presumably verbatim) in the novel, about two-thirds of the way through the text.

Saying that “the novel practically wrote itself,” Oates organized the story and recast it as fiction, but at certain points she revised the text to include “Maureen Wendall’s” words verbatim. Oates noted that, rather than sensationalizing the story of the Wendalls to make slum life more lurid, she softened some sections so that they would not overwhelm the reader. She said that the confessional aspect was, at least temporarily, extremely therapeutic to “Maureen Wendall” and that all the family members were still living.

THEM on Wikipedia

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)