It Is Not Just My Pet Peeve

From Daily Writing Tips:
Posted: 30 Dec 2010 03:04 AM PST
So you want to be politically correct, you want to be inclusive, and you would never assume that every nurse and every teacher in the world is a “she.” Right?
Right.
But sometimes this worthy thought leads us to perform some very clumsy gymnastics. Consider this passage from a guide for a doctor’s front office staff:
Show the patient how to use their medicine.
Does this patient have three heads with three mouths through which to ingest medications? Or maybe the patient is using a medication produced by several Big Pharma companies?
We can see the impulse behind this absurdity: whoever wrote this document didn’t want to suggest that every patient in the practice was a “he.” Or a “she,” unless the doc’ was a gynecologist. But this good intention led to a moment of bad grammar: pronouns need to agree with their nouns.
We have several alternatives that honor our desire for inclusiveness without sliding into the ridiculousness. One obvious strategy is simply to make the noun plural:
Show patients how to use their medicine.
Another is to change the pronoun (his, her, its) to an article (the, a, an):
Show the patient how to use the medicine.
Or, if it works in the context, we can change the singular “medicine” to the plural:
Show the patient how to use medicines.
Each of these approaches allows the writer to make sense without offending anyone’s sensibilities.
Remember: in U.S. English, collective nouns are singular:
Zappit Electric just raised its rates. (Not “their rates”)
An army travels on its stomach. (Not “their stomach”)
The jury returned its verdict. (Not “their verdict”)

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mr Brady to be politcally corrrect, do not say Christmas Break say Winter or Decemeber break, I noticed you did not reply to my other comment.

Mr. B said...

I generally do not reply to anonymous comments- don't hide behind anonymity when critiquing.

As for your comment, it is not Winter break- that occurs in February. The week off between Christmas and New Years is Christmas break. Calling it something else really seem like over doing political correctness.

According to the latest figures 91% of Americans celebrate Christmas. That does not necessarily mean they celebrate it as a religious holiday- it has obvious social overtones as well. So calling the vacation that we get during this holiday Christmas vacation seem reasonable.

Jack Tz/Jezoc said...

91% of Americans celebrate Christmas, but only 84% of Americans are Christians. It is now pretty much a secular holiday.

234 said...

The break in Feb. is feb. break, not winter break......