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Sie and hir

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Sie and hir are inflected forms of a proposed gender-neutral third person singular personal pronoun for the English language (see gender-neutral pronouns). This neologism is used by some people who feel that there are problems with gender-specific pronouns because they imply sex and/or gender (see non-sexist language). However, sie and hir are very rare compared to other solutions and most commentators feel that it is unlikely that they will catch on.

Some science fiction writers have been known to use the sie and hir pronouns for fictional intersex characters (such as Burgoyne 172 in the series or in Robert Anton Wilson's Schrödinger's Cat trilogy). It was also moderately popular on the Usenet group alt.sex.bondage in the early 1990's. [link]

The recommended usage is shown in the table below. See Declension for more information on each of the cases.

Subject Object Possessive adjective Possessive pronoun Reflexive
Male He laughed I hit him His face bled I am his He washes himself
Female She laughed I hit her Her face bled I am hers She washes herself
Neuter It laughed I hit it Its face bled I am its It washes itself
Gender-neutral Sie laughed I hit hir Hir face bled I am hirs Sie washes hirself

It is possible to capitalise these words for all of the reasons other pronouns would be capitalised.

Etymology

Consider someone trying to put a left hand into a right-handed glove; if either the glove or the hand is replaced with its reverse you'll get a gloved hand. Obviously this doesn't work if the person specifically wants this glove on hir left hand
[First recorded usage] of hir on usenetMay 26 1981
The ancestors of this pronoun set could date back to at least the 1930s: to hes, hir, hem (quoted in the Washington Post), and se, sim, sis (quoted in the Liverpool Echo).

Hir probably comes from patching together his, him, and her – sharing the common "h" and taking an "i" from his or him and an "r" from her. Alternatively, it might come from the pronoun hir in Chaucer's English, meaning "her". From hir, the extension to hirs and hirself is quite natural.

One theory for the origin of sie is that it came from S(he), I(t), (h)E. Another is that it was borrowed from the German sie, which means you, she, her, they, or them depending on context and/or capitalisation.

Pronunciation guide

Like many neologisms introduced on the internet, different people pronounce these words in different ways. The most common pronunciations are included here, along with pronunciation guides — see the International Phonetic Alphabet for English to decode them.

Problems with \"sie\" and \"hir\"

These are some of the arguments some people make against these pronouns:

Variants

References

Gender-neutral pronouns
He | Singular they
Spivak | Ve | Xe | Ze | Sie/hir

 


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