iamshadowlark
Banned
WTF is this shit?
Why not just say:
1st year student
2nd year student
3rd year student
4th year student
?
Or is that not convoluted enough?
I was talking about the people in this thread, but I see how that could be taken either way. Seriously, no one is making a word illegal or anything.
It didn't hurt anyone in the first place. This is an overreaction to an overreaction.
Intelligence and common sense are under attack by idiots who think this is something worth addressing. Not only is it not worth addressing, it's not an issue. It's only an issue for people who somehow think having "man" at the end of a word somehow means the word defers to men first. It refers to a human, not a man, and we shouldn't have to change things just because some people don't know that. Our society shouldn't defer to the thoughts and opinions of the lowest common denominator.
Intelligence and common sense are under attack by idiots who think this is something worth addressing. Not only is it not worth addressing, it's not an issue. It's only an issue for people who somehow think having "man" at the end of a word somehow means the word defers to men first. It refers to a human, not a man, and we shouldn't have to change things just because some people don't know that. Our society shouldn't defer to the thoughts and opinions of the lowest common denominator.
It's a bit silly but if they want to make a minor harmless change in an effort to promote inclusiveness I don't see the harm.
The harm comes from accommodating stupidity. Everyone is within their right to change something, especially something so innocuous, but doing so on the basis of stupidity is completely uncalled for, especially from an educational institution.
The harm comes from accommodating stupidity. Everyone is within their right to change something, especially something so innocuous, but doing so on the basis of stupidity is completely uncalled for, especially from an educational institution.
Also the plural of 'men' is also a gender neutral term.
It is not Policeman and Policewoman. It is Policeman and Policemen. It is not Chairman and Chairwoman, it is Chairman and Chairmen. People who have issue need to get their heads extricated from the recesses of their ass.
Is chair a proper gender neutral term, or did they just take out the man out of chairman? 'Vice Chair' just sounds silly
The plural of man is men. The plural of woman is not men.
You are also begging the question here. The fact that other titles may default to the male gender form does not mean that they, and terms like them such as freshman, are actually gender-neutral. And, as an aside, Chairwoman is certainly a term.
So it's a minor issue but they are correct that the term is gendered.
You are speaking complete nonsense. Only a morons refer to someone as a Chairwoman. The proper address is Madame Chairman not Madame Chairwoman.
The plural of man may be men but so is the plurality of human when it relates to the qualification of said humans.
Just call them Mentos.
But my mom said addressing people by "it" is not educated. ((
This is the best one
There's a supreme irony in a university (a place that is supposed to be a bastion for free speech) telling their staff that they now have to use gender neutral language in letters and such.
You saying something is nonsense or only done by morons does not establish that it is so.
Here are some morons at the Associated Press using the word chairwoman.
http://www.boston.com/news/local/ma...-chairwoman/vhmF2MU57I3KPye2dCKDBP/story.html
And some morons at the New York Times.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/06/business/avon-chairwoman-to-step-down.html?_r=0
So, your umbrage notwithstanding, it appears to be an actual term that is used.
I don't understand what you think you're saying in the last sentence. The plurality of human is not "humen." "Humen" isn't a word.
Policeman does not refer to male who polices, it refers to Human who polices. The plural of the word is 'men' hence policemen and this applies to any human being who is a police officer regardless of gender.
Just because people use it as a measure of nonsensical gender neutrality does not make the underlying basis anything but nonsense. So yes, people who ascribe to such things for such reasons are morons. Completely so.
Just because people use the phrase animal epidemic it does not mean it's a correct term to use. The correct term being epizootic.
Also, I did not say the plural of human is humen.
Policeman does not refer to male who polices, it refers to Human who polices. The plural of the word is 'men' hence policemen and this applies to any human being who is a police officer regardless of gender.
"Everyone who disagrees with me is a stupid doo-doo head" is not an argument that I can really respond to. Since the propriety of a particular term is subject to whether it is popularly used, rather than the preference of individual NeoGAF user Atrus, I'm going to have to conclude that the examples I provided above demonstrate that Chairwoman is perfectly cromulent.
You're begging the question again in your last paragraph. The notion here is that the term "Policeman" arose at a time when the only humans who policed were in fact male, so it made sense to use a gendered term, but now that there are also women who perform police duties, a non-gendered term is more appropriate. The idea that the "man" at the end of such words is some kind of contraction of "human" is pretty dubious.
I'm going to have to conclude that the examples I provided above demonstrate that Chairwoman is perfectly cromulent.
Came to post this.Freshmyn.
This is completely insane and asinine on your part and is example of nonsense spiraling out of control and if you want to go toe to toe on tangible points we can do so and you will lose.
Firstly, the classification of man is not dubious. The term of Man and Woman both originate with the 'Man' suffix as they originate from German, Wifman and Werman. Hence the classification of Policeman is not in reference to the gender.
This is why we have Police Dog and not Police Dog and Police Bitch. Man is a classifier for human and your hand waving achieves nothing.
Secondly, just because there is an accepted colloquial term does not mean that the usage is technically correct, as the term animal epidemic is understood but is also nonsensical. The prevalence of a belief does not make it correct.
And the converse is true.
"I'm offended that they continue to use the word Freshman because..."
How can you conclude that statement without looking overly defensive?
I'm personally of the opinion that no matter which way you approach this from, it's not a big deal and really isn't newsworthy. On the one hand, I don't think many people were probably all that bothered by 'freshman', so "why bother?" isn't an altogether unreasonable question. But on the other, if even one person was remotely bothered by it, changing the documentation is a simple "Find & Replace" endeavor, so it also seems pointless to react as though this was a gargantuan undertaking that was enacted at the expense of more pressing concerns.
Is there any benefit in doing this? Who would potentially be offended by the term 'freshman', used for male and female first-year students alike, and why? Is the term 'freshman' gender-exclusive now?
The idea -- at least on paper -- is that it's a more inclusive term that can be implemented with little effort. While the efficacy of such a decision may be completely inconclusive and it may not be unreasonable to suggest that such a move is pointless, it strikes me as equally pointless to cling to the old words as something that deserves opposition.
I don't think that the campus police are going to crack down on students using the term freshman in conversation, for instance. Therefore, this probably has next to no impact on anyone.
This implies 'freshman' is a more exclusive term. And I simply disagree on that, and that point alone.
You seem pretty upset and dickwaving over this extremely trivial matter.
In English, man is male, woman is female. A term that ends in "man" thus refers to male. I don't know why you keep insisting that "human" has something to do with it. The term is Policeman, not Policehuman. I don't see the relevance of Old English or German or whatever because terms like "Policeman" or "Chairman" arose long after "man" had been firmly established as male.
But are you hurt by it being removed? If someone is upset over the term freshman because it offends them, changing it to a more specific term doesn't really affect anyone negatively, does it?
But are you hurt by it being removed? If someone is upset over the term freshman because it offends them, changing it to a more specific term doesn't really affect anyone negatively, does it?
How about "Jim Jones, fifth-year quarterback who was red shirted in his first year."?lol at now having to call one and done basketball players first year "students"
Or football players: Jim Jones, fifth year fourth year quarterback who was red shirted as a first year student
Go fuuuuuuuuck yourselves PC police
Let me say this in bullet point then:
1. The ENGLISH term has an origin.
2. This origin is the FOUNDATION of the application of that English.
3. This application is gender neutral like Hatter or Furrier was gender neutral.
4. The only time when it becomes gender specific is when people, like you, insist on needing a separate term to refer to woman other than human being.
At no point so far did you dispute the specific examples I gave you in how language works. By your understanding, we should now refer to Police Dogs by their respective gender as well solely because of this blind belief that we're not classifying human beings but genders.
Nope but the fact that people can be offended by anything people will just want to change everything for the sake of change.
This is the best one
How about "Jim Jones, fifth-year quarterback who was red shirted in his first year."?