From ... Path: archiver1.google.com!news1.google.com!newsfeed.stanford.edu!logbridge.uoregon.edu!uio.no!Norway.EU.net!news01.chello.no!not-for-mail Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp Subject: Re: PART TWO: winning industrial-use of lisp: Re: Norvig's latest paper on Lisp References: <86d6unh1p1.fsf@rowlf.interhack.net> <3233615371462919@naggum.net> <3233677487195639@naggum.net> Mail-Copies-To: never From: Erik Naggum Message-ID: <3233685780109473@naggum.net> Organization: Naggum Software, Oslo, Norway Lines: 68 User-Agent: Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.2 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2002 22:03:00 GMT X-Complaints-To: abuse@chello.no X-Trace: news01.chello.no 1024696980 212.186.234.171 (Sat, 22 Jun 2002 00:03:00 MET DST) NNTP-Posting-Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 00:03:00 MET DST Xref: archiver1.google.com comp.lang.lisp:35417 * Tim Bradshaw | If I understand you, then I agree. The syntax must make sense, so it's | `they are' but not `they is'. `They is' or anything where the | disagreement is too glaring would immediately make me think the | writer/speaker was not very literate. My point exactly. However, there is no telling what people who want to make changes to a language might want to do. Mismatch in number is already a grammatical error. One could regard compounding this grammatical error with another as worsening the already sorry situation. At one point, of course, you have a completely different sentence, which has become grammatical through any number of individual ungrammatical steps. Where to start? Where to stop? _How_ do you decided that some ungrammatical form is acceptable? Of course, you might argue, a native speaker would never write "they is", so you do not even consider that an option. HOWEVER, people have actually done this in the past, a long time ago. Whether it was another stupid stunt to try to get rid of he/she or not, I have no way of telling, but what I wrote was precisely what I have found. This is, again, why I write "there is some record" of this phenomenon. That I either did not interpret "singular third person pronoun" to mean "of course, we don't treat it as a singular for any _other_ purposes" or the person who argued this was blindly _unaware_ of the historical record that some _illiterates_ (in my view as well as the position taken by linguists both then and after the fact), it is hard to tell, but I am so fucking tired of people who attack me for their own goddamn emotional problems and general failure to cope with unwelcome feelings and events. | What is OK is something like: `someone broke in last night, but they did not | steal the biscuits' where the `they' quite clearly refers to an (unknown) | individual. I *think* that this would not have been corrected, but I can't | do a retrospective experiment... I would not object to that, but I would not call it a _singular_ pronoun. It is something else. Indefinite or whatever, but calling it "singular" would imply the singular form of other words, too. The fact that "you are" is the same for singular and plural does not mean that randomly using another pronoun in a new role carries anything similar with it. Languages do not grow that way. Historically, languages have grown through steps of least resistance. Is there less resistance from "he is" to "they is" or to "they are"? People _have_ in fact differed in this view, regardless of the fucking annoying ignorance of James A. Crippen and his need to blame me for it. | There's a fine skating-around-of-syntactic-problems that goes on in this | usage I think. It's possible to construct linguistic situations where things | really jar, and in previous exchanges with people I've had about this they've | spent a lot of time trying to construct such situations to make me admit I | would not really use `they'. I think the answer is that in those cases I'd | probably revert to `he', or just avoid them. It is fairly obvious to me that you _cannot_ just make a simple change like "s/he/they/". In order to make this work, you have to change the whole way you think about referring to people. I consider it massively stupid to even _attempt_ to believe that "he" can be replaced with "they" without serious ramifications. There is a difference betwen "may the best man win" and "may the best man or woman win" -- you would instead say "may the best contestant win". If you would say "someone broke in last night, but at least he left the aquarium intact", is it better to rewrite to "they" than to rewrite to "someone broke in last, fortunately leaving the aquarium intact"? The use of pronouns is just one of several ways to refer back to something. Simple and short sentence structures with subject-verb-object forms need pronouns more than more complex sentence structures. It may be highly preferable to find other forms of expression if the pronouns get in the way than to use more pronouns. -- Guide to non-spammers: If you want to send me a business proposal, please be specific and do not put "business proposal" in the Subject header. If it is urgent, do not use the word "urgent". If you need an immediate answer, give me a reason, do not shout "for your immediate attention". Thank you.