I am not a native English speaker and I have sometimes referred to people as male and female (as that is what I have been taught) but I have received some backlash in some cases, especially for the word “female”, is there some negative thought in the word which I am unaware of?

I don’t know if this is the best place to ask, if it’s not appropriate I have no problem to delete it ^^

  • locuester@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago

    Yeah, 2020 is the time period I’m referring to. I had never heard of it being a thing until George Floyd and BLM movement in 2020, then GitHub changed in response to that.

    I’ve been in IT for 35 years. And I never heard a single negative thing about branch names and master/slave terminology until 2020.

    Perhaps you think that was set aside because IDE hard drives are dead.

    • Vanth@reddthat.com
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      8 months ago

      It goes even further back than I was aware, to 2003.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3243656.stm

      My sticking point in your original statement is that all this “sensitivity” is new, allegedly aligning with covid and George Floyd and BLM. That’s not the case and it minimizes the decades of work people have spent trying to influence language to be more inclusive.

      3 years ago may be when pearl-clutchers started reaching a critical volume to where media saw the dollar signs in catering to them.

      • locuester@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        All this sensitivity being mainstream is new to me. It came from all angles in all aspects of life very suddenly.

        Yes you can find some things happening in the past, but sweeping changes were made in the 2020-2022 timeframe.

        That fact doesn’t minimize anyone’s prior efforts, thoughts, feelings, actions, movements, or otherwise. The attempts to fix the English collective masculine date back to 1795.

        As early as 1795, dissatisfaction with the convention of the collective masculine led to calls for gender-neutral pronouns, and attempts to invent pronouns for this purpose date back to at least 1850, although the use of singular they as a natural gender-neutral pronoun in English has persisted since the 14th century.