logoalt Hacker News

sockaddryesterday at 9:08 PM7 repliesview on HN

Haha. I try to use they/them/their instead of he/her/him etc as a way of keeping stories a little more anonymized but I suppose it could be confusing.

I am curious, do other people find this style of writing confusing? Genuinely curious.


Replies

rcxdudeyesterday at 9:11 PM

It read fine to me.

OkayPhysicistyesterday at 10:13 PM

Singular they/them is mostly only a problem to non-native speakers. It's a pretty uniquely English thing to blur the singular and plural, at least among languages that use pronouns much.

SwiftyBugyesterday at 9:31 PM

That was a little confusing to me as well. English is not my native language, so maybe I just didn't understand the nuance.

zemyesterday at 10:13 PM

no I didn't even notice till the child comment

Imustaskforhelptoday at 12:05 AM

No I found it readable though I can understand why they might be confused a little bit too but its nothing to worry about in my opinion.

Honestly regarding your anecdote and the gourmet syndrome the title itself, I don't really have nothing to add except I guess just note that human mind truly just works in remarkable ways.

But each day science uncovers more and more secrets about our brains. Maybe one day the gourmat syndrome or (your anecdote [if its a syndrome? or anything more observed or who knows, I am not sure as I don't have much medical knowledge being honest] might be explained in future too by future science advancements and scientists)

It's crazy how far we have come in medical science and (also not) [but I don't mean it in a bad way] at the same time.

fatata123today at 12:16 AM

[dead]

NedFyesterday at 10:27 PM

[dead]