This is a really interesting situation. I can be gender neutral in English but not in Portuguese.
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Replying to @gamesbymanuel
What are singular pronouns in Portuguese? We have he / she / it, but many people use "they" as a "singular person of unspecified gender".
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Replying to @randyhoyt
The equivalent to he/she, but not it. Everything is assigned a gender in portuguese (and most Latin-based languages as well).
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Replying to @gamesbymanuel @randyhoyt
Gendered language in Romance-speaking countries gets very confusing. "Why is a bridge male here and female there?"
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Replying to @DanielSolis @randyhoyt
It's not even logical. Take vehicles, for example: Car: male Van: female Bus: male Bike: female Boat: male Plane: male Train: male
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Isn't it masculine and feminine not male and female? Is there a difference between the two?
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Male and female are genders while masculine and feminine are adjectives. To me there's nothing about a car that makes it masculine.
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In writing board game rules it makes sense to use singular they because people not inanimate objects play board games.
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Absolutely! I've seen some confusing sentences in gameplay examples, which can be solved by calling the reader "you" and naming the players.
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Replying to @gamesbymanuel @WhoWhatWhyCast and
Ok this is a super interesting point we never considered, nice one!
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Replying to @_QualityBeast @gamesbymanuel and
Yeah, I use short A, B, C, D names for complex examples. Alex, Beth, Cat, Dan, etc.
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End of conversation
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