this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2024
778 points (99.2% liked)
196
16708 readers
2682 users here now
Be sure to follow the rule before you head out.
Rule: You must post before you leave.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
This but also there's no good they/them in German. Gotta wait for the feature first.
Just make shit up. Just do der/dem which will confuse the fuck out of people.
But der/dem is male
Der/das?
Using das is like calling people it. So usually very insulting.
People don't want to be a powerful entity that can shapeshift into anything it wants?
They prefer to be a disembodied hand that comes out of a box.
But der/dem is male
lemmy pranked you by posting your comment twice
Maybe ze? The way "they" sounds with a German accent?
I've seen dey/dem which I find just doesn't sound natural. I generally say "die Person" for gender neutral speech.
"ze" is more like "the", no? I've seen "dey" been used sometimes, but it's not common at all
"Ze" would be pronounced like "tsay." "Zie" would be closer to "the", sounding like "tsee."
Probably understood that in the wrong direction. Ze (eng. phon.) would be spelled more like "sie" (ger. phon.) and would sound like "the" with a German accent. They would become either dey (eng. phon.) or zey (eng. phon.), spelled like "deej" or "seej" (ger. phon.), or even without the y (or j) at the end.
I think. I'm neither native German or English.
I wrote "ze" and "zie"from a German phonetic perspective. "Tsay" and "tsee" are the English ones.
There‘s a reasonable proposal for „en“, so you can just use that
The german language is not bound by the laws of some institute, you can just use whatever you like!*
* Not applicable in schools in saxony, bavaria, schleswig-holstein, and saxony-anhalt.