Desna's Avatar |
5th Ed seems to avoid this, by simply using "you" and "your", throughout.
Correct, and when "you" and "your" isn't feasible, 5th Ed. uses "he or she" and "him or her". It's far more common-sensical, inclusive, appropriate, and reasonable than the PF2 Playtest approach to assume female gender throughout.
ErichAD |
I didn't really notice the pronouns on reading, but aren't they still using the iconic's respective pronouns in examples? Shaving off a couple letters for every "their" to "she/her" seems fine. You could cut down further and go to male for "his/he" or first person "I/My" I suppose to really shave it down.
Please don't go first person. I can't read a game manual written like that.
This seems like the most minor of editorial concerns. I'd recommend leaving it to the non-native English speakers to debate over as those like myself are probably going to be fine however you chose to do it.
It could be fun to use one of the iconics as your iconic DM. I remember hearing one or two lost their job as a class iconic so it would be nice to give them a spot. My memory of that is fuzzy though, so I could be wrong. The iconic medium could be a better choice due to the relationship between card reading and storytelling in Golarion.
RazarTuk |
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“They” has been widely used as a gender-neutral singular pronoun for quite some time, though it is by no means universal.
"They" for an indefinite singular antecedent has been around since Shakespeare, although the modern usage as "It, but acceptable to refer to humans as" is, well, modern.
the nerve-eater of Zur-en-Aarh |
Steve Geddes wrote:"They" for an indefinite singular antecedent has been around since Shakespeare, although the modern usage as "It, but acceptable to refer to humans as" is, well, modern.
“They” has been widely used as a gender-neutral singular pronoun for quite some time, though it is by no means universal.
Around since Chaucer, iirc.
RazarTuk |
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RazarTuk wrote:Around since Chaucer, iirc.Steve Geddes wrote:"They" for an indefinite singular antecedent has been around since Shakespeare, although the modern usage as "It, but acceptable to refer to humans as" is, well, modern.
“They” has been widely used as a gender-neutral singular pronoun for quite some time, though it is by no means universal.
Wouldn't know, but he's Middle English, anyway. Point is, the only modern innovation with the singular "they" is using to refer to a specific person. We've been using it for indefinite people possibly for as long as we've been speaking Modern English.
Epic Meepo RPG Superstar 2009 Top 16, 2012 Top 32 |
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Several years ago, while experimenting with ways to make rules text more concise, I discovered that replacing all pronouns in the PRD with "you" and "your" whenever possible (and changing sentence structure, accordingly) reduced the size of the document by several thousand words.
Quite literally, the PF1 Core Rulebook could have included multiple pages of additional content if it had used "you" and "your" instead of third-person pronouns. In English, the sentence structure you use when speaking directly to the reader can be surprisingly efficient.