• domhnall [he/him]
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    4 years ago

    “Latinx” at least serves some function. The others just seem like pointless woke signaling.

      • RION [she/her]
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        4 years ago

        I feel like if latinx were pronounced like "laTEEN-eks" instead of "latinn-EKS" to fit with the phonetics of the gendered version there wouldn't be as much confusion with it

      • domhnall [he/him]
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        4 years ago

        Actually yeah, that makes a whole lot more sense. Is that correct according to the language?

          • domhnall [he/him]
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            4 years ago

            Yeah sorry, I didn't mean to tacitly defer to whatever institution claims to decide what is or isn't "correct" according to the language. That was a poor word choice. A better way of phrasing my question would have been: is that already a well established convention?

            Part of the reason I ask is that from the first time I encountered it, "latinx" kind of struck me as a silly thing that some white Americans might come up with without realizing that a convention for referring to people in a way that indicated their Latin-American ethnicity while remaining gender neutral already existed. Though I don't know the history behind the "latinx" convention, so I could easily be dead wrong.

        • gay [any]
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          4 years ago

          We have a Royal institution that claims to establish the rules. And it says that "the masculine form can work as gender neutral". So

          Is that correct according to the language?

          no but people don't care and it's actually pronounceable.

          • domhnall [he/him]
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            4 years ago

            Yeah, as I say in my above comment relying to sofodeas:

            Yeah sorry, I didn’t mean to tacitly defer to whatever institution claims to decide what is or isn’t “correct” according to the language. That was a poor word choice. A better way of phrasing my question would have been: is that already a well established convention?

            Part of the reason I ask is that from the first time I encountered it, “latinx” kind of struck me as a silly thing that some white Americans might come up with without realizing that a convention for referring to people in a way that indicated their Latin-American ethnicity while remaining gender neutral already existed. Though I don’t know the history behind the “latinx” convention, so I could easily be dead wrong.

      • wtypstanaccount04 [he/him]
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        4 years ago

        How is it pronounced? I've been pronouncing it like "latrine". Is it pronounced "la-teen-eh" cause that's much cooler.