Ride Singapore's SkyOrb cable car, dine on local classics, and watch the Wings of Time fireworks show in Sentosa — a perfect evening
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Ride Singapore's SkyOrb cable car, dine on local classics, and watch the Wings of Time fireworks show in Sentosa — a perfect evening
New poster prints in! . Are you #teammoon or #teamsun . . #skyorb #arcanebullshit #witchyvibes #witchythings https://www.instagram.com/p/CTaRIcOnVyc/?utm_medium=tumblr
skyorb replied to your post: i cant stand not having legs
I can’t handle not having hands. :(
I can't take not stealing
I can't deal with not having cards
Totally agree. Now that I think about it though, I don't think spanish has a grammatically correct singular and neutral "they". "Usted" is the equivalent of the english "you", but used either towards elders or people you don't know very well. I can't think of an equivalent of singular "they" though. "They" roughly translates to "ellos", but that is plural and not gender neutral.
Not really. Usted can be both second and third person. "Usted era" and "usted es" are equally grammatically correct.
So if I was to say "Si se llama 'latino,' usted probablemente es de las Americas," that would be grammatically correct. I'd be using "usted" as a singular "they," rather than "ello," which is the equivalent of "he."
Spanish has a lot more third person pronouns. Not only are there plurals of "he" and "she," but there's a singular of "they." El, ella, usted; ellos, ellas, ustedes. (Usted and ustedes of course also serving as second person pronouns, and ustedes being in the unique position of the only second person pronoun in most countries outside of Spain, because no one else likes "vosotros," another word without an English equivalent.)