We’ve used “they” as a singular pronoun for 700 years; it’s not a leftist conspiracy

If you hang out on social media long enough, eventually you’ll come across an article about gender that uses they to refer to someone instead of using he or she. You’ll likely also encounter people who cite such a practice as proof of the degradation of society, that the left is trying to force their agenda on everyone else.

This post isn’t about taking a particular political side. I thought it’d be important that people understand going into this debate that there is significant precedence for using they as a singular pronoun.

For example, in Stephen Harrod Buhner’s Ensouling Language, we read the following on page 358:

While the universal he did enjoy about a century of primary use, the use of the singular they has been in common use since the thirteenth century, a much longer duration. For much of that time, it was the term of choice for a universal pronoun. (Interestingly enough, some writers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries refused to ever use the universal he, believing it too sexist. They were shouted down by the mandatory school reformers.) The controversy over singular they is exactly the same as that over split infinitives. The problem is human created, not inherent in usage.

So, that’s interesting. The use of “they” as a singular pronoun isn’t a recent practice; it’s been around for over 700 years. In fact, according to Wikipedia, many respected classical authors have used “they” as a singular pronoun, including the following:

  • Geoffrey Chaucer in The Pardoner’s Prologue (1395)
  • William Shakespeare in Hamlet (1599)
  • Jane Austen in Mansfield Park (1814)
  • George Bernard Shaw in Caesar and Cleopatra (1901)

Common style guides are not unanimous in their approach to this usage.

Chicago supports it, for example:

“The singular they. A singular antecedent requires a singular referent pronoun. Because he is no longer accepted as a generic pronoun referring to a person of either sex, it has become common in speech and in informal writing to substitute the third-person plural pronouns they, them, their, and themselves, and the nonstandard singular themself. While this usage is accepted in casual context, it is still considered ungrammatical in formal writing.” (The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th edition, §5.46)

while APA rejects it:

“A pronoun must agree in number (i.e. singular or plural) with the noun it replaces.

Correct: Neither the highest scorer nor the lowest scorer in the group had any doubt about his or her competence.

Incorrect: Neither the highest scorer nor the lowest scorer in the group had any doubt about their competence.” (Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition. p. 79)

Also, of note, in January 2015, the American Dialect Society voted the singular “they” as word of the year.

My point, I suppose, with mentioning all of this is that if you’re a proponent of using “they” as a singular pronoun that isn’t gendered, you have some fairly strong support for that position.

By Kim Siever

I am a copywriter and copyeditor. I blog on writing and social media tips mostly, but I sometimes throw in my thoughts about running a small business. Follow me on Twitter at @hotpepper.