On The Formality Of The Usage Of The Word “Their”





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Is using "their" in a phrase "Everyone has their reasons for doing something" informal? This reason I'm asking this is because a test book I'm using claims that using their in the situation above is informal, and that "his or her" is the more formal alternative. I find this very strange however, and would like someone to verify this claim. So is using "their" in the situation above considered informal?



Thanks.










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  • 1




    It depends what you mean by "formal". Would you care to give us a definition?
    – WS2
    Sep 29 at 14:40










  • @WS2 I should have been more specific. I meant formal as in grammatically correct.
    – Ethan Chan
    Sep 29 at 14:41










  • 'Everyone' is singular, but 'their' (and 'they') are plural, although that may be changing.
    – AmI
    Sep 29 at 18:34










  • Some good answers here
    – S Conroy
    Sep 29 at 20:44










  • It would be perfectly grammatical either way.
    – WS2
    Sep 30 at 6:09

















up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1












Is using "their" in a phrase "Everyone has their reasons for doing something" informal? This reason I'm asking this is because a test book I'm using claims that using their in the situation above is informal, and that "his or her" is the more formal alternative. I find this very strange however, and would like someone to verify this claim. So is using "their" in the situation above considered informal?



Thanks.










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 18 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.











  • 1




    It depends what you mean by "formal". Would you care to give us a definition?
    – WS2
    Sep 29 at 14:40










  • @WS2 I should have been more specific. I meant formal as in grammatically correct.
    – Ethan Chan
    Sep 29 at 14:41










  • 'Everyone' is singular, but 'their' (and 'they') are plural, although that may be changing.
    – AmI
    Sep 29 at 18:34










  • Some good answers here
    – S Conroy
    Sep 29 at 20:44










  • It would be perfectly grammatical either way.
    – WS2
    Sep 30 at 6:09













up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
0
down vote

favorite
1






1





Is using "their" in a phrase "Everyone has their reasons for doing something" informal? This reason I'm asking this is because a test book I'm using claims that using their in the situation above is informal, and that "his or her" is the more formal alternative. I find this very strange however, and would like someone to verify this claim. So is using "their" in the situation above considered informal?



Thanks.










share|improve this question













Is using "their" in a phrase "Everyone has their reasons for doing something" informal? This reason I'm asking this is because a test book I'm using claims that using their in the situation above is informal, and that "his or her" is the more formal alternative. I find this very strange however, and would like someone to verify this claim. So is using "their" in the situation above considered informal?



Thanks.







formality colloquialisms






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asked Sep 29 at 14:34









Ethan Chan

1011




1011





bumped to the homepage by Community 18 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 18 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.










  • 1




    It depends what you mean by "formal". Would you care to give us a definition?
    – WS2
    Sep 29 at 14:40










  • @WS2 I should have been more specific. I meant formal as in grammatically correct.
    – Ethan Chan
    Sep 29 at 14:41










  • 'Everyone' is singular, but 'their' (and 'they') are plural, although that may be changing.
    – AmI
    Sep 29 at 18:34










  • Some good answers here
    – S Conroy
    Sep 29 at 20:44










  • It would be perfectly grammatical either way.
    – WS2
    Sep 30 at 6:09














  • 1




    It depends what you mean by "formal". Would you care to give us a definition?
    – WS2
    Sep 29 at 14:40










  • @WS2 I should have been more specific. I meant formal as in grammatically correct.
    – Ethan Chan
    Sep 29 at 14:41










  • 'Everyone' is singular, but 'their' (and 'they') are plural, although that may be changing.
    – AmI
    Sep 29 at 18:34










  • Some good answers here
    – S Conroy
    Sep 29 at 20:44










  • It would be perfectly grammatical either way.
    – WS2
    Sep 30 at 6:09








1




1




It depends what you mean by "formal". Would you care to give us a definition?
– WS2
Sep 29 at 14:40




It depends what you mean by "formal". Would you care to give us a definition?
– WS2
Sep 29 at 14:40












@WS2 I should have been more specific. I meant formal as in grammatically correct.
– Ethan Chan
Sep 29 at 14:41




@WS2 I should have been more specific. I meant formal as in grammatically correct.
– Ethan Chan
Sep 29 at 14:41












'Everyone' is singular, but 'their' (and 'they') are plural, although that may be changing.
– AmI
Sep 29 at 18:34




'Everyone' is singular, but 'their' (and 'they') are plural, although that may be changing.
– AmI
Sep 29 at 18:34












Some good answers here
– S Conroy
Sep 29 at 20:44




Some good answers here
– S Conroy
Sep 29 at 20:44












It would be perfectly grammatical either way.
– WS2
Sep 30 at 6:09




It would be perfectly grammatical either way.
– WS2
Sep 30 at 6:09










1 Answer
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According to the APA blog:




The singular they is also commonly used to refer to a person whose gender is irrelevant or unknown—for example, imagine the sentence "The participant indicated their preferences." However, most formal writing and style guides, including the APA Publication Manual, the Chicago Manual of Style, and the AP Stylebook, do not currently support this usage, deeming it too informal and/or ungrammatical.




Thus, I would say that your textbook is correct, although if you're using a specific style guide you should check it to make sure. The blog goes on to mention the strategy of using "his or her" as one alternative (of several) to replace "their", but it says to "avoid overusing this strategy, as it can become cumbersome upon many repetitions".






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






    active

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    active

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    up vote
    1
    down vote













    According to the APA blog:




    The singular they is also commonly used to refer to a person whose gender is irrelevant or unknown—for example, imagine the sentence "The participant indicated their preferences." However, most formal writing and style guides, including the APA Publication Manual, the Chicago Manual of Style, and the AP Stylebook, do not currently support this usage, deeming it too informal and/or ungrammatical.




    Thus, I would say that your textbook is correct, although if you're using a specific style guide you should check it to make sure. The blog goes on to mention the strategy of using "his or her" as one alternative (of several) to replace "their", but it says to "avoid overusing this strategy, as it can become cumbersome upon many repetitions".






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      According to the APA blog:




      The singular they is also commonly used to refer to a person whose gender is irrelevant or unknown—for example, imagine the sentence "The participant indicated their preferences." However, most formal writing and style guides, including the APA Publication Manual, the Chicago Manual of Style, and the AP Stylebook, do not currently support this usage, deeming it too informal and/or ungrammatical.




      Thus, I would say that your textbook is correct, although if you're using a specific style guide you should check it to make sure. The blog goes on to mention the strategy of using "his or her" as one alternative (of several) to replace "their", but it says to "avoid overusing this strategy, as it can become cumbersome upon many repetitions".






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote









        According to the APA blog:




        The singular they is also commonly used to refer to a person whose gender is irrelevant or unknown—for example, imagine the sentence "The participant indicated their preferences." However, most formal writing and style guides, including the APA Publication Manual, the Chicago Manual of Style, and the AP Stylebook, do not currently support this usage, deeming it too informal and/or ungrammatical.




        Thus, I would say that your textbook is correct, although if you're using a specific style guide you should check it to make sure. The blog goes on to mention the strategy of using "his or her" as one alternative (of several) to replace "their", but it says to "avoid overusing this strategy, as it can become cumbersome upon many repetitions".






        share|improve this answer












        According to the APA blog:




        The singular they is also commonly used to refer to a person whose gender is irrelevant or unknown—for example, imagine the sentence "The participant indicated their preferences." However, most formal writing and style guides, including the APA Publication Manual, the Chicago Manual of Style, and the AP Stylebook, do not currently support this usage, deeming it too informal and/or ungrammatical.




        Thus, I would say that your textbook is correct, although if you're using a specific style guide you should check it to make sure. The blog goes on to mention the strategy of using "his or her" as one alternative (of several) to replace "their", but it says to "avoid overusing this strategy, as it can become cumbersome upon many repetitions".







        share|improve this answer












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        answered Sep 29 at 18:58









        Laurel

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