(it could be said that it's better translated as singular they, heyyyyy)
Turkish isn't a gendered language gramatically, per se. 'o' is the third person singular and is often presented in texts as he/she/it.
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But some terms take an explicitly gendered construction. 'bilim' is 'science'; 'bilim adamı' is 'scientist', but literally 'science man'.
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But I've seen some translations use 'insanı' (human) instead, which I guess is cool. Bilim insanı, science human.
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I guess I am 'veri bilim insanı' -- data science human.
End of conversation
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