“One can do his homework in the library”Is it typical native speaker usage to inconsistently use the pronoun “one” in a paragraph?You, you two, you people and you'seUsing the pronoun 'one' twice in a sentence for the same personIs it grammatically correct to use his, her, or his/her?pronoun/noun followed by present participle'A or B' - singular or pluralWhat's up with “this,” in Old English(Ænȝlıſ͡ċ/Anglo Saxon‽)On the principle governing pronoun forms with verbs and after prepositionsCombining demonstrative and possessive pronoun“I showed the monkey himself in the mirror”. Why is this sentence grammatical?
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“One can do his homework in the library”
Is it typical native speaker usage to inconsistently use the pronoun “one” in a paragraph?You, you two, you people and you'seUsing the pronoun 'one' twice in a sentence for the same personIs it grammatically correct to use his, her, or his/her?pronoun/noun followed by present participle'A or B' - singular or pluralWhat's up with “this,” in Old English(Ænȝlıſ͡ċ/Anglo Saxon‽)On the principle governing pronoun forms with verbs and after prepositionsCombining demonstrative and possessive pronoun“I showed the monkey himself in the mirror”. Why is this sentence grammatical?
One can do his homework in the library.
One can do one's homework in the library.
Nowadays, are these structures part of colloquial English? The use of one as a pronoun is still in use or is it considered formal if not old-fashioned? In this case how can we render colloquially the same idea?
pronouns
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
One can do his homework in the library.
One can do one's homework in the library.
Nowadays, are these structures part of colloquial English? The use of one as a pronoun is still in use or is it considered formal if not old-fashioned? In this case how can we render colloquially the same idea?
pronouns
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
3
One wonders just whose homework the first sentence is suggesting that one do in the library.
– tchrist♦
2 hours ago
@tchrist Thanks for the feedback. Actually the first sentence was posted here french.stackexchange.com/questions/34230/pronoun-choice-for-on
– Dimitris
2 hours ago
1
The problem isn't the one. The problem is that one matches with one’s in English, not with his, which would appear to be some other guy’s homework. :) Sure we can do our own homework, and you can do your own homework, mais on ne peut pas faire les devoirs de quelques autre mec à notre bibliothèque. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
One can do his homework in the library.
One can do one's homework in the library.
Nowadays, are these structures part of colloquial English? The use of one as a pronoun is still in use or is it considered formal if not old-fashioned? In this case how can we render colloquially the same idea?
pronouns
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
One can do his homework in the library.
One can do one's homework in the library.
Nowadays, are these structures part of colloquial English? The use of one as a pronoun is still in use or is it considered formal if not old-fashioned? In this case how can we render colloquially the same idea?
pronouns
pronouns
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 2 hours ago
DimitrisDimitris
1134
1134
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Dimitris is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
3
One wonders just whose homework the first sentence is suggesting that one do in the library.
– tchrist♦
2 hours ago
@tchrist Thanks for the feedback. Actually the first sentence was posted here french.stackexchange.com/questions/34230/pronoun-choice-for-on
– Dimitris
2 hours ago
1
The problem isn't the one. The problem is that one matches with one’s in English, not with his, which would appear to be some other guy’s homework. :) Sure we can do our own homework, and you can do your own homework, mais on ne peut pas faire les devoirs de quelques autre mec à notre bibliothèque. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
3
One wonders just whose homework the first sentence is suggesting that one do in the library.
– tchrist♦
2 hours ago
@tchrist Thanks for the feedback. Actually the first sentence was posted here french.stackexchange.com/questions/34230/pronoun-choice-for-on
– Dimitris
2 hours ago
1
The problem isn't the one. The problem is that one matches with one’s in English, not with his, which would appear to be some other guy’s homework. :) Sure we can do our own homework, and you can do your own homework, mais on ne peut pas faire les devoirs de quelques autre mec à notre bibliothèque. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
3
3
One wonders just whose homework the first sentence is suggesting that one do in the library.
– tchrist♦
2 hours ago
One wonders just whose homework the first sentence is suggesting that one do in the library.
– tchrist♦
2 hours ago
@tchrist Thanks for the feedback. Actually the first sentence was posted here french.stackexchange.com/questions/34230/pronoun-choice-for-on
– Dimitris
2 hours ago
@tchrist Thanks for the feedback. Actually the first sentence was posted here french.stackexchange.com/questions/34230/pronoun-choice-for-on
– Dimitris
2 hours ago
1
1
The problem isn't the one. The problem is that one matches with one’s in English, not with his, which would appear to be some other guy’s homework. :) Sure we can do our own homework, and you can do your own homework, mais on ne peut pas faire les devoirs de quelques autre mec à notre bibliothèque. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
The problem isn't the one. The problem is that one matches with one’s in English, not with his, which would appear to be some other guy’s homework. :) Sure we can do our own homework, and you can do your own homework, mais on ne peut pas faire les devoirs de quelques autre mec à notre bibliothèque. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
In my opinion, using one in this sense is grammatical but awkward. I don't think it is entirely a matter of formality or that the usage has fallen out of practice (although, comparing one can, he can, she can, they can on ngrams does tell an intriguing story). I think the use of one is comparable to the use of the passive voice: both are clear and technically correct, but simply strained.
The best solution is to use a more specific word than one.
A student can do his or her homework in the library.
A touch of awkwardness remains. An easy resolution is to replace his or her with their (if you accept the singular they).
A student can do their homework in the library.
Alternatively, we can just make the subject plural. After all, the library should accommodate multiple students.
Students can do their homework in the library.
add a comment |
These days, one seldom uses the subject "one", meaning the impersonal "one", though one generally still understands when others use it. It sounds stilted and old-fashioned. It's too bad that it has gone out of use. I liked it.
2
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
In my opinion, using one in this sense is grammatical but awkward. I don't think it is entirely a matter of formality or that the usage has fallen out of practice (although, comparing one can, he can, she can, they can on ngrams does tell an intriguing story). I think the use of one is comparable to the use of the passive voice: both are clear and technically correct, but simply strained.
The best solution is to use a more specific word than one.
A student can do his or her homework in the library.
A touch of awkwardness remains. An easy resolution is to replace his or her with their (if you accept the singular they).
A student can do their homework in the library.
Alternatively, we can just make the subject plural. After all, the library should accommodate multiple students.
Students can do their homework in the library.
add a comment |
In my opinion, using one in this sense is grammatical but awkward. I don't think it is entirely a matter of formality or that the usage has fallen out of practice (although, comparing one can, he can, she can, they can on ngrams does tell an intriguing story). I think the use of one is comparable to the use of the passive voice: both are clear and technically correct, but simply strained.
The best solution is to use a more specific word than one.
A student can do his or her homework in the library.
A touch of awkwardness remains. An easy resolution is to replace his or her with their (if you accept the singular they).
A student can do their homework in the library.
Alternatively, we can just make the subject plural. After all, the library should accommodate multiple students.
Students can do their homework in the library.
add a comment |
In my opinion, using one in this sense is grammatical but awkward. I don't think it is entirely a matter of formality or that the usage has fallen out of practice (although, comparing one can, he can, she can, they can on ngrams does tell an intriguing story). I think the use of one is comparable to the use of the passive voice: both are clear and technically correct, but simply strained.
The best solution is to use a more specific word than one.
A student can do his or her homework in the library.
A touch of awkwardness remains. An easy resolution is to replace his or her with their (if you accept the singular they).
A student can do their homework in the library.
Alternatively, we can just make the subject plural. After all, the library should accommodate multiple students.
Students can do their homework in the library.
In my opinion, using one in this sense is grammatical but awkward. I don't think it is entirely a matter of formality or that the usage has fallen out of practice (although, comparing one can, he can, she can, they can on ngrams does tell an intriguing story). I think the use of one is comparable to the use of the passive voice: both are clear and technically correct, but simply strained.
The best solution is to use a more specific word than one.
A student can do his or her homework in the library.
A touch of awkwardness remains. An easy resolution is to replace his or her with their (if you accept the singular they).
A student can do their homework in the library.
Alternatively, we can just make the subject plural. After all, the library should accommodate multiple students.
Students can do their homework in the library.
answered 1 hour ago
Benjamin KuykendallBenjamin Kuykendall
727210
727210
add a comment |
add a comment |
These days, one seldom uses the subject "one", meaning the impersonal "one", though one generally still understands when others use it. It sounds stilted and old-fashioned. It's too bad that it has gone out of use. I liked it.
2
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
These days, one seldom uses the subject "one", meaning the impersonal "one", though one generally still understands when others use it. It sounds stilted and old-fashioned. It's too bad that it has gone out of use. I liked it.
2
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
These days, one seldom uses the subject "one", meaning the impersonal "one", though one generally still understands when others use it. It sounds stilted and old-fashioned. It's too bad that it has gone out of use. I liked it.
These days, one seldom uses the subject "one", meaning the impersonal "one", though one generally still understands when others use it. It sounds stilted and old-fashioned. It's too bad that it has gone out of use. I liked it.
answered 1 hour ago
Greg LeeGreg Lee
14.7k2932
14.7k2932
2
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
2
2
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
Surely in an age where pronominal use can be dictated by referent not by the referrer, you could just tell people that your preferred pronouns are one and one’s. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Dimitris is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dimitris is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dimitris is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Dimitris is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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3
One wonders just whose homework the first sentence is suggesting that one do in the library.
– tchrist♦
2 hours ago
@tchrist Thanks for the feedback. Actually the first sentence was posted here french.stackexchange.com/questions/34230/pronoun-choice-for-on
– Dimitris
2 hours ago
1
The problem isn't the one. The problem is that one matches with one’s in English, not with his, which would appear to be some other guy’s homework. :) Sure we can do our own homework, and you can do your own homework, mais on ne peut pas faire les devoirs de quelques autre mec à notre bibliothèque. :)
– tchrist♦
1 hour ago