LINGUIST List 3.282
Mon 23 Mar 1992
Disc: A List of Common Gender Pronouns
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Dennis Baron, common gender pronouns
Message 1: common gender pronouns
Date: Fri, 20 Mar 92 9:48:07 CSTcommon gender pronouns
From: Dennis Baron <baronux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
Subject: common gender pronouns
In view of the interest in the common gender pronoun I am enclosing
a list summarizing my findings to date on the state of proposals
dealing with the issue. It is a longish list, and you may prefer
not printing it, in which case I will be happy to send it to anyone
who is interested.
debaronuiuc.edu
The Epicene Pronouns:
A Chronology of the Word That Failed
Dennis Baron
Professor of English and Linguistics
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
ca. 1850 ne, nis, nim; hiser NY Commercial Advertiser, 7
August 1884, 3.
1868 en Cited by Richard Grant White. The Galaxy, August,
241-44.
1884 thon, thons Charles Crozat Converse. The Critic, 2
August, 55.
hi, hes, hem Francis H. Williams. The Critic, 16
August, 79-80.
le, lis, lim (from the French); unus; talis Edgar
Alfred Stevens. The Current, 30 August, 294.
hiser, himer (hyser, hymer) Charles P. Sherman. The
Literary World, 6 September, 294.
ip, ips Emma Carleton. The Current, 20 September,
186.
1888 ir, iro, im (sg.); tha, thar, them (pl.) Elias Molee,
Plea for an American Language (Chicago: John
Anderson), 200-01.
1889 ons (from one) C.R.B. Writer 3: 231
1890 e (from he), es, em (from them) James Rogers of
Crestview, Florida. Writer 4: 12-13
1891 hizer Forrest Morgan. Writer 5: 260-62.
ith George Winslow Pierce. The Life-Romance of an
Algebraist (Boston: J.G. Cupples), 35.
1912 he'er, him'er, his'er, his'er's Ella Flagg Young.
Chicago Tribune, 7 January, 1:7.
1914 hie, hiez, hie (phonetic spellings of he, hes, he)
Language reformer Mont Follick, in The Influence
of English (London: Williams & Norgate, 1934), pp.
198-99, prefers to reduce all third person sg.
pronouns to this simplified version of the
masculine paradigm. He further suggests
discarding the possessive altogether in favor of
the prepositional phrase, ov hie.
1927 ha, hez, hem; on The Forum 77: 265-68 Attributed by
H. L. Mencken to Lincoln King, of Primghar, Iowa.
(American Language [N.Y., Knopf, 4th ed., 1936],
460n).
hesh (heesh), hizzer, himmer; on Fred Newton Scott
(Scott mentions earlier creation of on). The
Forum 77: 754; Mencken adds, "In 1934 James F.
Morton, of the Paterson (N.J.) Museum, proposed to
change hesh to heesh and to restore hiser and
himer" (American Language Supp. 2, 1948, 370).
ca. 1930 thir Sir John Adams; cited by Philip Howard, New
Words for Old (N.Y.: Oxford University Press,
1977), 95.
1934 she, shis, shim (gender-specific parallel to he, his,
him) Cited by Phillip B. Ballard, Thought and
Language (London: Univ. of London Press), 7-8.
1935 himorher; hes (pron. [h s]), hir (pron. [hir]), hem;
his'n, her'n "The Post Impressionist."
Washington Post, 20 August, 6.
1938 se, sim, sis Gregory Hynes, "See?" Liverpool Echo, 21
September; cited by H. L. Mencken (American
Language Supp. 2, 1948 370).
ca. 1940 heesh A. A. Milne; cited by Maxwell Nurnberg, What's
the Good Word? A New Way to Better English (N.Y.:
Simon and Schuster, 1942, 88-90).
1945 hse Buwei Yang Chao, How to Cook and Eat in Chinese
(N.Y.: Vintage, Random House, 3rd ed., 1963, rpt.
1972), xxiv.
1970 she (contains he), heris, herim Dana Densmore,
"Speech is the Form of Thought," No More Fun and
Games: A Journal of Female Liberation (April);
cited in Media Report to Women 3.1 (January 1975):
12.
co (from IE *ko), cos Mary Orovan, Humanizing English
(N.Y.: the author).
ve, vis, ver Varda (Murrell) One. Everywoman, 8 May,
2.
1971 ta, ta-men (pl.); a borrowing from Mandarin Chinese.
Leslie E. Blumenson, New York Times, 30 December.
1972 tey, term, tem; him/herself Casey Miller and Kate
Swift, "What about New Human Pronouns?" Current
138: 43-45.
fm Paul Kay, Newsletter of the American
Anthropological Association 13 (April): 3.
it; z Abigail Cringle of Edgerton, Maryland, rejects
epicene it, prefers z. Washington Post, May 2,
Sec. A, 19.
shis, shim, shims, shimself Robert B. Kaplan,
Newsletter of the American Anthropological
Association 13 (June): 4.
ze (from Ger. sie), zim, zees, zeeself; per (from
person), pers Steven Polgar of Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, proposes the ze paradigm; John Clark
offers per. Newsletter of the American
Anthropological Association 13 (September): 17-18
1973 na, nan, naself June Arnold, The Cook and the
Carpenter (Plainfield, Vt: Daughters, Inc.).
it; s/he Norma Wilson et al., editors, "A Woman's New
World Dictionary," 51%: A Paper of Joyful Noise
for the Majority Sex, 3-4.
s/he; him/er; his-or-her Cited and rejected by Gordon
Wood, "The Forewho--Neither a He, a She, nor an
It," American Speech 48: 158-59.
shem; herm Quidnunc, "Thon--That's the Forewho,"
American Speech 48: 300-02.
se (pron. [si]), ser (pron. [sIr]), sim (pron. [sIm]),
simself William Cowan, of the Department of
Linguistics, Carleton University (Ottowa), Times
Two 6 (24 May): n.p.
j/e, m/a, m/e, m/es, m/oi; jee, jeue Monique Wittig
employs the slashed pronouns as feminines, and
cites the latter two which employ the more
traditional feminine e; Le corps lesbien (Paris:
Editions de Minuit); The Lesbian Body, trans.
David LeVay (London: Peter Owen, 1975).
1974 ne, nis, ner Mildred Fenner attributes this to Fred
Wilhelms. Today's Education 4: 110.
she (includes he) Gena Corea, "Frankly Feminist,"
rpt. as "How to Eliminate the Clumsy `He,'" Media
Report to Women 3.1 (January 1975): 12.
en, es, ar David H. Stern of Pasadena, California,
The Los Angeles Times, 19 January, Sec. 2, p. 4.
hisorher; herorhis; ve, vis, vim Cited by Amanda
Smith, Washington Post, 11 April, Sec.A, 29.
shem, hem, hes Paul L. Silverman of Rockville,
Maryland, Washington Post, 17 December, Sec. A,
17.
1975 hir, herim (facetious) Milton Mayer, "On the
Siblinghood of Persons," The Progressive 39
(September): 20-21.
hesh, himer, hiser, hermself Jan Verley Archer, "Use
New Pronouns," Media Report to Women 3.1
(January): 12.
se (pron. [si]) H. R. Lee of Alexandria, Virginia,
Forbes 116 (15 August): 86.
ey, eir, em; uh Christine M. Elverson of Skokie,
Illinois, Chicago Tribune, 23 August, Sec. 1, p.
12.
h'orsh'it (facetious blend of he, she, or it) Joel
Weiss of Northbrook, Illinois, Forbes 116 (15
September): 12.
1976 ho, hom, hos, homself (from Lat. homo, `man,' and
prefix homo-, `the same, equal, like') Donald K.
Darnell, in Donald K. Darnell and Wayne
Brockriede, Persons Communicating (Englewood
Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall), 148.
he or she; to be written as (s)he Elizabeth Lane
Beardsley, "Referential Genderization," in Carol
C. Gould and Marx W. Wartofsky, eds., Women and
Philosophy (N.Y.: G.P. Putnam's Sons), 285-93.
she, herm, hs (facetious; pron. "zzz") Paul B.
Horton, "A Sexless Vocabulary for a Sexist
Society," Intellect 105 (December): 159-60.
it Millicent Rutherford, "One Man in Two is a Woman,"
English Journal (December): 11.
ca. 1977 po, xe, jhe Cited as recent and ephemeral by Casey
Miller and Kate Swift, Words and Women: New
Language in New Times (Rpt., N.Y.: Anchor Press,
130). Paul Dickson, Words (1982), p. 113,
attributes jhe, pronounced "gee," to Professor
Milton A. Stern of the University of Michigan.
E, E's, Em; one E was created by psychologist Donald
G. MacKay of the University of California at Los
Angeles.
1977 e, ris, rim Werner Low, Washington Post, 20 February,
Sec. C, 6.
sheme, shis, shem; heshe, hisher, himmer Thomas H.
Middleton, "Pondering the Personal Pronoun
Problem," Saturday Review 59 (9 March). Sheme,
etc. proposed by Thomas S. Jackson of Washington,
D. C.; Middleton refers to proposals for heshe,
hisher, himmer.
em, ems Jeffrey J. Smith (using pseudonym TINTAJL
jefry) Em Institute Newsletter (June).
1978 ae Cited by Cheris Kramer(ae), Barrie Thorne, and
Nancy Henley, "Perspectives on Language and
Communication," Signs 3: 638-51, as occurring in
fiction, especially science fiction.
hir Ray A. Killian, Managers Must Lead! (AMACOM)
press release; cited in "The Epicene Pronoun Yet
Again," American Speech 54 (1979): 157-58.
hesh, hizer, hirm; sheehy; sap (from homo sapiens)
Tom Wicker, "More About He/She and Thon," New York
Times, 14 May, Sec. 4, p. 19 Hesh etc. proposed
by Prof. Robert Longwell of the University of
Northern Colorado; sheehy by David Kraus of Bell
Harbor, N.Y.; sap (facetiously) by Dr. Lawrence S.
Ross, of Huntington, N.Y.; Wicker adds that
several readers offered blends of he, she, and it.
heesh, hiser(s), herm, hermself Leonora A. Timm, "Not
Mere Tongue in Cheek: The Case for a Common Gender
Pronoun in English," International Journal of
Women's Studies 1: 555-65.
1979 one Lillian E. Carleton, "An Epicene Suggestion,"
American Speech 54: 156-57.
et, ets, etself Aline Hoffman of Sarnia, Ontario;
cited by William Sherk, Brave New Words (Toronto:
Doubleday Canada, 1979).
hir, hires, hirem, hirself Jerome Ch'en, Professor of
History at York University, New York Times, 6
January, 18.
shey, sheir, sheirs; hey, heir, heirs Paul Encimer
favors the first over the second paradigm. The
Peacemaker 32 (February): 2-3.
1980 it Herman Arthur, "To Err Is Huperson; to Forgive,
Divine," American Educator 4 (Winter): 30-32.
1981 heshe, hes, hem Ronald C. Corbyn, "Getting Around
Sexist Pronouns," Anthropology Newsletter 22
(October): 10-11.
1982 shey, shem, sheir Mauritz Johnson; cited by William
Safire, What's the Good Word? (N.Y.: Times Books),
30.
E, Ir Subject and possessive forms, created by the
Broward County, Florida, public schools; cited by
Paul Dickson in Words (N. Y.: Delacorte), 113.
1984 hiser McClain B. Smith, Ann Arbor News, 20 January,
Sec. A, 6.
hes Ernie Permentier, Ms. (May): 22.
hann Steven Schaufele of the Univ. of Illinois
linguistics department takes this from Old Norse,
already the source of some English pronouns;
analogous to Finnish han. Colorless Green
Newsflashes 4 (9 November), 3.
1985 herm Jenny Cheshire traces this to the magazine
Lysistrata. "A Question of Masculine Bias,"
Today's English 1: 26.
1988 han, hans A. M. Stratford, of Norfolk, England,
creates this form to resemble other British
initials (HM, HRH, HMS, HE, HMSO), English Today
14:5-6.
e, e's (from the common letter in he and she) Eugene
Wine, of Miami-Dade Community College, also notes
that I and you "have already been reduced to a
single vowel sound." Chronicle of Higher
Education, 21 September, 2.
1989 ala, alum, alis Michael Knab, of Goodwin, Knab and
Co., Chicago, derives these from Lat. al, `other'
and feels they resemble the Hawaiian sex-neutral
pronouns oia, ia. Press release and personal
communication.
e, e's, emself, em Victor J. Stone, Professor of Law
at the University of Illinois at Urbana. In the
Chicago Bar Association's CBA Record 3
(July/August): 12.
1991 de/deis; den/din Richard Strand, Keith Roberson, Dan
Fisher, BLAST (Computer) Support Office, Dept. of
Mechanical Englineering, Univ. of Illinois.
de/deis (rhymes with `dee/dyes') created de novo
with some Germanic influence; den/din created on a
similar `root' to replace man/woman and men/women.