Honestly I’ve done mostly forgot, and with the proliferation of AI technologies and all the typos AI has read from in the training models, I bet AI isn’t always right about this either.

I usually just don’t care anymore, whether the autocorrect puts the apostrophe in or not.

  • NeatNit
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    6 days ago

    “its” is comparable to “his” or “her”, not to e.g. “Dave’s”.

    • over_clox@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 days ago

      I think you meant hers, with an S, but I get your point. Does that mean “it” is/was meant to function as a pronoun?

      Rhetorical question for the pronoun nazis, if I don’t know the sex/gender of a kitten, I’m gonna call it an it. If I don’t know the sex/gender of a human, I’m probably still gonna call it an it.

      See post above, his, hers, and its are linguistically compatible, meaning that him, her, and it must be equally compatible.

      • NeatNit
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        5 days ago

        I meant her. Mike and his guitar; Sarah and her violin; The computer and its speakers.

      • davidgro@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        The obvious issue with ‘it’ as a pronoun for a person (or in my opinion a mammal or other sentient animal) is that it’s literally objectifying them: The main use of ‘it’ is for inanimate objects. Sometimes that’s used for effect, for example calling a pedophile an it. But unless you really dislike a person of nonspecific gender, just call them a them.

        • over_clox@lemmy.worldOP
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          5 days ago

          Them was originally intended as plural though. When did people decide to jank up the defined language? They/them/those are meant as plural.

          And I might have made a subtle mistake earlier. He/she/it are pronouns, him/her/it as well.

          His/hers/its are possessive pronouns. Can we try to stick to some sort of standard in the language, with clarity and without offense?

          • davidgro@lemmy.world
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            5 days ago

            Singular ‘they’ is centuries old. Apparently even older than singular ‘you’. It’s only recently that people tried to make it a rule that it should only be used as a plural, but really it’s used in natural language as a singular all the time like I did. (Did you notice it in the middle of my previous comment, not just the end?)