As long as we continue to teach in text book and class that there are pronouns, common and neuter genders, there will be abundant room for reform.
Pronouns in the news, 1897 edition: The writer agrees with earlier claims that English has only two genders, masculine and feminine. A precursor to today's red-state anti-pronoun laws and an executive order. Edwardsville, IL, Intelligencer, Nov. 2, 1897, p.2.As
13.03.2026 15:31
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
The Bee says trochaic is not in its word list.
on the other hand
13.03.2026 13:53
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
New York Times Spelling Bee allows the word epicene.
The 🐝 is gender inclusive.
13.03.2026 13:35
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
Article critical of Young's heer, hiser, himer, which the author treats as part of the simplified spelling movement.
Pronouns in the news, 1912 edition: Making fun of coined gender pronouns is as old as the pronouns themselves. When Ella Flagg Young backed he'er, him'er, his'er, a writer jokingly offered to reduce "you or I" to "youri," and "me and you" to "menu." Greenville IL Advocate, Jan. 11, 1912.
12.03.2026 16:44
👍 5
🔁 2
💬 1
📌 0
2/2 Being good teachers, they use it in a sentence: "If the person who lost a's purse will call at this office a will perhaps hear of it." And, "There is a beggar at the door." "Well, give un that piece of bread and meat." The Greenville Advocate, April 17, 1879, p. 1.
12.03.2026 16:11
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Pronouns in the news, 1879 edition: At a school meeting, Greenville IL teachers discuss the need for a common gender pronoun, and one suggests using the dialect forms: a, a'z, an (or un). Being good teachers, they use it in a sentence: "If the person who lost a's purse will call at this office a will perhaps hear of it." And, "There is a beggar at the door." "Well, give un that piece of bread and meat." The Greenville Advocate, April 17, 1879, p. 1.
1/2 Pronouns in the news, 1879 edition: At a school meeting, Greenville IL teachers discuss the need for a common gender pronoun, and one suggests using the dialect forms: a, a'z, an (or un).
12.03.2026 16:11
👍 1
🔁 1
💬 2
📌 0
London Times headline: Can you make hummus on the moon? Scientists are small step closer.
It's not green cheese after all, it's hummus.
06.03.2026 04:30
👍 2
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
2/2 The intended pronoun was actually "thon," coined in 1858, but either the writer or a helpful editor has changed "thon" to "thou" multiple times in the article. Beaumont (TX) Enterprise, Sep. 12, 1920, p. 30.
05.03.2026 15:23
👍 3
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Newspaper article from 1920 considers the pronoun thou instead of the generic he or the coordinate he or she.
1/2 Pronouns in the news, 1920 edition: After the 19th Amendment guaranteed votes for women, politicians were advised to drop generic 'he' in their stump speeches. Since 'he or she' was never a popular option, this writer considers the gender-neutral "thou" instead.
05.03.2026 15:23
👍 4
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
National Grammar Day 2026
The long wait is over. National Grammar Day is here. And on the Web of Language: blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/4048...
04.03.2026 15:53
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
National Grammar Day 2026
Reminder: National Grammar Day is coming ... tomorrow. But you can read about it now on the Web of Language: blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/4048...
03.03.2026 16:13
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
National Grammar Day 2026
March 4th is National Grammar Day. Read all about it on the Web of Language: blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/4048...
01.03.2026 18:10
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Screenshot of a scam email offering to "promote" a book I wrote 36 years ago.
Got a couple of these scam requests recently. Didn't realize they were so widespread: www.nytimes.com/2026/02/25/b...
26.02.2026 16:59
👍 3
🔁 1
💬 1
📌 0
Welcome to the Banned Speech State
There's a new post on the Web of Language: Welcome to Florida, "the banned speech state." Read all about it: blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/3371...
17.02.2026 18:30
👍 3
🔁 1
💬 0
📌 0
Engraved on a red heart shape: Roses are red, violets are blue, singular they's older than singular you.
A timely valentine from Dr Grammar: pronouns have histories.
13.02.2026 15:34
👍 178
🔁 42
💬 0
📌 4
Guardian article reports that reading, writing, learning languages can lower risk of dementia
Great news for all you humanists out there: Reading and writing lower dementia risk--or, you can increase that risk by spending 4:28 listening to the article.
12.02.2026 02:40
👍 3
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Crossword with three common gender pronoun clues: 13 across: him or her, a suggested common gender pronoun; 18 across, he or she, a suggested common gender pronoun. 40 across, that one; he, she, or it, suggested common gender pronoun, third person.
Pronouns in the news, 1930 ed: antedating and author identified. Richard Tingley, prolific crossword setter, put three common-gender pronoun clues in a puzzle that ran in late 1930; this one appeared in the Rockford (IL) Star, Dec. 28, p. 23. The puzzle ran the next day in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
05.02.2026 19:05
👍 7
🔁 5
💬 0
📌 2
almost time to re-up my valentine
03.02.2026 22:35
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
lived in allston during the blizzard of 1969. 36" or so all over the city. everything shut down for a week or more. people eventually shoveled out their cars and used lawn chairs to save the spot for when they came back. park there at your peril.
26.01.2026 22:26
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
John Hancock's signature on a facsimile of the Declaration of Independence
Today is National Handwriting Day. But you can only read about it online, on the Web of Language: blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/1360...
23.01.2026 16:17
👍 3
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
National Handwriting Day 2026
Get ready for National Handwriting Day by reading all about it on the Web of Language.
blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/1360...
17.01.2026 22:33
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Washington Post headline: Officials showed off a robo-bus in D.C. It got hit by a Tesla driver.
King Kong vs. Godzilla?
16.01.2026 19:40
👍 2
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Shakespeare and Hamnet shop for school supplies
Re-upping an old cartoon: In the run-up to National Handwriting Day, January 23, William Shakespeare takes young Hamnet shopping for school supplies. At ſtaples, of course.
11.01.2026 20:10
👍 6
🔁 1
💬 0
📌 0
much depends on context, speaker, intent, and so on. it's why the iha definition is a "working definition." what's your goal in this? describe change over time? corpus search? differences across manuals and style guides? all of that? it's a subject that awaits your expert eye.
09.01.2026 18:34
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
Tree reflected in water that is starting to freeze.
impressionism is alive and well
09.01.2026 17:40
👍 7
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
A. cartoon of an old anarchist armed with a pencil
The Old Anarchist says, "I've got a pencil and I know how to use it.". Je suis Charlie.
08.01.2026 05:45
👍 2
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
a crow
flying
As the crow flies...
02.01.2026 16:27
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
large wasp nest blown onto grass by high winds. no idea from where.
we had 50+ mph winds a couple of days ago and the next day this was on the lawn. no idea whose house or tree it came from.
01.01.2026 00:56
👍 5
🔁 1
💬 0
📌 0
Faith-based grammar
All you need to know about faith-based grammar in my new post on the Web of Language. blogs.illinois.edu/view/25/1328...
26.12.2025 18:09
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
ABD No.
26.12.2025 03:29
👍 3
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0