Language around gender and identity evolves (and always has) | Archie Crowley

108,574 views ・ 2021-04-16

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I am a linguist.
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Linguists study language.
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And we do this in a lot of different ways.
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Some linguists study how we pronounce certain sounds.
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Others look at how we build sentences.
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And some study how language varies from place to place,
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just to name a few.
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But what I'm really interested in
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is what people think and believe about language
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and how these beliefs affect the way we use it.
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All of us have deeply held beliefs about language
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such as the belief that some languages are more beautiful than others
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or that some ways of using language are more correct.
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And as most linguists know,
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these beliefs are often less about language itself
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and more about what we believe about the social world around us.
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So I’m a linguist,
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and I'm also a nonbinary person,
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which means I don't identify as a man or a woman.
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I also identify as a member of a broader transgender community.
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When I first started getting connected to other transgender people,
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it was like learning a whole new language
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and the linguist part of me was really excited.
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There was a whole new way of talking about my relationship with myself
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and a new clear way to communicate that to other people.
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And then I started having conversations with my friends and family
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about what it meant for me to be trans and nonbinary,
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what those words meant to me specifically,
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and why I would use both of them.
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I also clarified the correct words they could use when referring to me.
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For some of them, this meant some very specific changes.
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For example, some of my friends
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who are used to talking about our friend group as “ladies” or “girls”
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switched to nongendered terms like “friends” or “pals.”
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And my parents can now tell people that their three kids are their son,
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their daughter and their child.
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And all of them would have to switch the pronouns they used to refer to me.
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My correct pronouns are “they” and “them,”
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also known as the singular they.
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And these people love me,
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but many of them told me that some of these language changes
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were too hard or too confusing
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or too ungrammatical for them to pick up.
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These responses led me to the focus of my research.
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There are commonly held,
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yet harmful and incorrect beliefs about language
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that for the people who hold these beliefs,
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act as barriers to building and strengthening relationships
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with the transgender people in their families and communities,
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even if they want to do so.
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Today, I'm going to walk you through some of these beliefs
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in the hope that we can embrace creativity in our language
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and allow language to bring us closer together.
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You might see your own beliefs reflected in these experiences in some way,
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but no matter what,
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I hope that I can share with you some linguistic insights
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that you can put into your back pocket
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and take with you out into the world.
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And I just want to be super clear.
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This can be fun.
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Learning about language brings me joy,
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and I hope that it can bring you more joy too.
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So do you remember how I said that for some of my friends and family
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learning how to use the singular they was really hard,
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and they said it was too confusing or too ungrammatical for them to pick up.
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Well, this brings us to the first belief about language that people have.
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Grammar rules don't change.
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As a linguist, I see this belief a lot out in the world.
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A lot of language users believe that grammar just is what it is.
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When it comes to language,
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what's grammatical is what matters.
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You can't change it.
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I want to tell you a story about English in the 1600s.
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Back then, as you might imagine,
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people spoke differently than we do today.
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In particular, they used "thou" when addressing a single other person,
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and "you" when addressing more than one other person,
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But for some complex historical reasons
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that we don't have time to get into today,
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so you'll just have to trust me as a linguist here,
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but people started using "you" to address someone,
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regardless of how many people they were talking to.
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And people had a lot to say about this.
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Take a look at what this guy, Thomas Elwood, had to say.
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He wrote,
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"The corrupt and unsound form of speaking in the plural number
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to a single person,
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‘you’ to one instead of ‘thou,’
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contrary to the pure, plain and single language of truth,
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‘thou’ to one and ‘you’ to more than one.”
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And he goes on.
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Needless to say,
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this change in pronouns was a big deal in the 1600s.
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But actually, if you followed the debates about the singular they at all,
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these arguments might sound familiar to you.
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They're not that far off from the bickering we hear
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about the so-called grammaticality of pronouns
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used to talk about trans and nonbinary people.
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One of the most common complaints about the singular they
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is that if "they" is used to refer to people in the plural,
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it can't also be used to talk about people in the singular,
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which is exactly what they said about “thou” and “you.”
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But as we have seen, pronouns have changed.
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Our grammar rules do change
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and for a lot of different reasons.
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And we're living through one of these shifts right now.
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All living languages will continue to change,
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and the Thomas Elwoods of the world
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will eventually have to get with the program
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because hundreds of years later,
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it's considered right to use "you" when addressing another person.
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Not just allowable, but right.
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The second belief about language that people have
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is that dictionaries provide official, unchanging definitions for words.
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When you were in school,
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did you ever start an essay with a sentence like,
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"The dictionary defines history as ..."
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Well, if you did, which dictionary were you talking about?
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Was it the Oxford English Dictionary?
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Was it Merriam Webster?
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Was it Urban Dictionary?
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Did you even have a particular dictionary in mind?
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Which one of these is “the dictionary?”
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Dictionaries are often thought of as the authority on language.
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But dictionaries, in fact, are changing all the time.
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And here's where our minds are really blown.
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Dictionaries don't provide a single definition for words.
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Dictionaries are living documents
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that track how some people are using language.
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Language doesn't originate in dictionaries.
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Language originates with people
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and dictionaries are the documents that chronicle that language use.
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Here's one example.
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We currently use the word "awful"
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to talk about something that is bad or gross.
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But before the 19th century, "awful" meant just the opposite.
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People used "awful" to talk about something
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that was deserving of respect
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or full of awe.
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And in the mid-1900s,
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"awesome" was the word that took up these positive meanings
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and "awful" switched to the negative one we have today.
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And dictionaries over time reflected that.
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This is just one example of how definitions and meanings
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have changed over time.
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And to keep up with it, how dictionaries are updated all the time.
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So I hope you're starting to feel a little more comfortable
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with the idea of changing language.
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But of course, I'm not just talking about language in general.
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I'm talking about language as it is impactful for trans people.
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And pronouns are only one part of language,
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and they're only one part of language that's important for trans people.
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Also important are the identity terms
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that trans people use to talk about ourselves,
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such as trans man, trans woman, nonbinary or gender queer.
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And some of these words have been documented in dictionaries
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for decades now
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and others are still being added year after year.
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And that's because dictionaries are working to keep up with us,
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the people who are using language creatively.
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So at this point, you might be thinking,
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"But Archie, it seems like every trans person has a different word
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they want me to use for them.
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There are so many opportunities for me to mess up or to look ignorant
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or to hurt someone's feelings.
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What is something I can memorize
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and reliably employ when talking to the trans people in my life?"
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Well, that brings us to the third belief about language that people have.
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You can't just make up words.
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Folks, people do this all the time.
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Here's one of my favorite examples.
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The "official" term for your mother's mother
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or your father's mother is grandmother.
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I recently polled my friends
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and asked them what they call their grandmothers.
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We don't get frustrated if your friend's grandma goes by Meemaw
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and yours goes by Gigi.
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We just make rather short work of it
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and memorize it and move on getting to know her.
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In fact, we might even celebrate her by gifting her with a sweatshirt
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or an embroidered pillow that celebrates the name she has chosen for herself.
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And just like your Nana and your grandma,
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trans people have every right to choose their own identifying language.
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The process of determining self-identifying language
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is crucial for trans people.
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In my research,
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many trans people have shared that finding new vocabulary
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was an important part of understanding their own identities.
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As one person I interviewed put it,
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"Language is one of the most important personal things
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because using different words to describe myself
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and then finding something that feels good, feels right,
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is a very introspective and important process.
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With that process you can piece together,
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with the language that you find out works best for you,
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who am I?"
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Sometimes the words that feel good are already out there.
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For me, the words trans and nonbinary just feel right.
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But sometimes the common lexicon doesn’t yet hold
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the words that a person needs to feel properly understood.
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And it's necessary and exciting to get to create and redefine words
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that better reflect our experience of gender.
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So this is a very long answer, but, yes,
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I'm absolutely going to give you a magic word,
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something really easy you can memorize.
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And I want you to think of this word
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as the biggest piece of advice I could give you
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if you don't know what words to use for the trans people in your life.
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Ask.
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I might be a linguist and a trans person
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and a linguist who works with trans people,
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but I'm no substitute for the actual trans people in your life
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when it comes to what words to use for them.
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And you're more likely to hurt someone's feelings by not asking
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or assuming
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than you are by asking.
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And the words that a person uses might change.
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So just commit to asking and learning.
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Language is a powerful tool
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for explaining and claiming our own identities
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and for building relationships that affirm and support us.
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But language is just that, a tool.
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Language works for us,
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not the other way around.
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All of us, transgender and cisgender
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can use language to understand ourselves
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and to respect those around us.
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We're not bound by what words have meant before,
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what order they might have come in
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or what rules we have been taught.
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We can consider the beliefs that we might have had
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about how language works
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and recognize that language will continue to change.
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And we can creatively use language
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to build the identities and relationships that bring us joy.
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And that's not just allowable.
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It's right.
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Believe me.
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