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Gender neutral language in Swedish: Difference between revisions

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==<translate><!--T:2--> Pronouns</translate>==  
==<translate><!--T:2--> Pronouns</translate>==  
===<translate><!--T:3--> Gender-neutral third-person singular</translate>===  
===<translate><!--T:3--> Gender-neutral third-person singular</translate>===  
<translate><!--T:4--> Swedish’s official gender-neutral pronoun is hen/hen/hens. The Swedish common-inanimate pronoun den/den/dens (equivalent to it/it/its) is also used for gender-neutral language and by some nonbinary people, as well as the non-standard anglicized practice of singular de/dem/deras (they/them/their). Some nonbinary people have also opted for neopronoun such as hin/hin/hins, which is in actuality an obsolete pronoun that means something alike “that one”, but is in modern times pretty much only used in the set phrase “hin håle” (the hard one, the devil). </translate>
<translate><!--T:4--> Swedish’s official gender-neutral pronoun is hen/hen/hens. The Swedish common-inanimate pronoun den/den/dens (equivalent to it/it/its) is also used for gender-neutral language and by some nonbinary people, as well as the singular de/dem/deras (they/them/their). Some nonbinary people have also opted for neopronoun such as hin/hin/hins, which is in actuality an obsolete pronoun that means something alike “that one”, but is in modern times pretty much only used in the set phrase “hin håle” (the hard one, the devil). </translate>
   
   
{| class="wikitable"  
{| class="wikitable"  
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{| class="wikitable"  
{| class="wikitable"  
! <u>De</u>  
! <u>De</u>  
! <translate><!--T:12--> Non-standard anglicized singular "they" </translate>
! <translate><!--T:12--> Singular "they" </translate>
|-  
|-  
!de  
!de  
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