Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main navigation, to the page content, or to more links within reference.
There is a range of indefinite words in English anybody, anyone; everybody, everyone; nobody, no one; somebody, someone; either, neither, each which traditionally have been used with the masculine singular pronoun: If anyone finds my glasses, could he let me know? In this role, the masculine pronoun notionally has an indefinite function, covering women as well as men.
However, it has come more and more to be seen as invidious to use a masculine pronoun to refer to women, and users of the language have been seeking an alternative. He or she, and she or he, are cumbersome, especially if they need to be repeated several times, and anyway they give precedence to males or females. Increasingly they, together with its possessive forms their and theirs, is becoming the preferred option: If anyone finds my glasses, could they let me know?
It is not yet completely established in standard English, and some people still object to it, but its usefulness is widely recognized, and it seems likely that in due course it will become generally accepted.
Remember that the third person plural possessive adjective is their: They've sold their house. Don't confuse it with the adverb there, 'in that place' or with they're, which is the shortened form of 'they are'.
The third person plural possessive pronoun is theirs (not their's): If this is theirs, they'd better take it.
Blue recalls the sea and the sky. Green symbolizes the earth. The red star represents unity. White stands for peace. Effective date: 27 June 1977.
>>