the "no pronoun people in my nintendo" part was so fucking funny that i had to look up whether this is bait or not
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saying that yer afraid of pronouns because trans people use them is like saying yer afraid of cereal because some people eat raisin bran and you eat frosted flakes
Let's be real tho, raisin bran is pretty fucking terrifying
no pronoun people in my nintendo my
Transphobes eVolved from one braincell collectively to two, and thats terrifying
So I don’t know what “Mario is pronouns now” means, and I don’t want to feed a Search Engine to figure it out. Sounds like I don’t need to know!
Just start misgendering people who screech about hating pronouns.
"Hey, now! Leave Brian alone! She's just voicing her opinion! Don't attack her! She doesn't deserve all the hate just for that!"
I like to give them diminutive nicknames. Bill is now Wittle Biwwy. You don't get to choose what we call you, asshole.
The far right will hate it but the left won’t care since they’re gender abolitionists
Maybe gender role abolitionists, but not gender altogether
It’s the same thing
Good.
They calling me xi/xer like I'm Caesar
conqueror of CISalpine gaul
Pronouns are played out.
I'm all about amateurnouns.
“My” is a pronoun.
I think it's an adjective.
"My" is the first-person singular possessive pronoun in English. It fills the same role in a sentence as the pronouns "his" or "her" or "their".
"This is my/his/her/their thing."
I don't see how it could be anything but a pronoun.
A pronoun replaces the noun. An adjective usually accompanies the noun, but it never replaces it.
"My house is there". I've never heard anyone saying "My is there". But I did hear saying "Mine is there".
That's actually a matter of some contraversiality.
You can't actually just replace "my" in a sentence with an adjective and have it come out sounding natural. You can say "this is my house" but you can't say "this is big house". You're missing a determiner, not an adjective.
Possessive determiners are determiners which express possession. Some traditional grammars of English refer to them as possessive adjectives, though they do not have the same syntactic distribution as bona fide adjectives.[1]
...
The words my, your, etc. are sometimes classified, along with mine, yours etc., as possessive pronouns[3][4] or genitive pronouns, since they are the possessive (or genitive) forms of the ordinary personal pronouns I, you etc. However, unlike most other pronouns, they do not behave grammatically as stand-alone nouns but instead qualify another noun, as in my book (contrasted with that's mine, for example, in which mine substitutes for a complete noun phrase such as my book). For that reason, other authors restrict the term "possessive pronoun" to the group of words mine, yours etc., which replaces directly a noun or noun phrase.[5][6] — Wikipedia, Possessive determiner
This is further complicated by the fact that some words are sometimes true pronouns, and sometimes possessive determiners (his, her, its). In this way, it is difficult to fully separate the role of possessive determiner from the role of pronoun.
But thank you for making me research it a bit more.
Depends on the language, some languages use the pronoun as the possessive as well.
He, she, it, das S muss mit
When the business is pandering