conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2023-02-04 11:14 am

My sister recently informed me that I have too many hills on which I intend to die

She's quite right, of course, and one day I'll write out a short and not at all comprehensive list of them for your amusement.

Today, though, I'll restrict myself to two, and I'll explain why when I'm done.

1. Data is a mass noun and not a count noun.

2. The "less or fewer" distinction is not a rule of traditional grammar, and whoever told you that lied to you. It's a made up zombie rule (technical term!) literally invented by some dude in the 1700s and ignored by careful, educated writers and speakers ever since.

If you're wondering why I picked those two, here's why:

If you combine them, you run the risk of referring to something or other having fewer data, and that's just... that's just wrong. It's just wrong. I'm sorry, I can't be descriptivist about this, I think it was in The New Yorker or something and it's wrong. It's all wrong.

You can't say "fewer data" and shame on you if you do it anyway.
sixbeforelunch: the tardis from doctor who, no text (doctor who - tardis)

[personal profile] sixbeforelunch 2023-02-02 04:25 pm (UTC)(link)

I am prepared to join you on both of these hills, most especially the first. I find “the data are” and “these data” jarring every time I hear it.

hudebnik: (Default)

[personal profile] hudebnik 2023-02-03 02:29 pm (UTC)(link)
To be honest, I find "the data is" jarring every time I hear it, but I hear it so often that my twitch response has become barely visible. Not a hill worth dying on; that battle is lost.

Likewise "a friend told me that they..." I'm all in favor of gender-neutral pronouns for situations in which gender is unknown or irrelevant, but my software-engineer mind says "we have a perfectly good gender-neutral singular pronoun that everyone already knows, so why not use it wherever we need a gender-neutral singular pronoun? That would be the elegant, efficient, 'right' answer; no need to invent new words or blur the grammatically-useful distinction of number." That battle too is lost.

I was honestly confused, ten years ago or so, when I first heard "they" used to refer to a single, specific, feminine-looking, feminine-dressed, feminine-named person in the same room a few feet away; I assumed it meant that person and her roommate. But it's 2023 now: "they" is as often singular as plural, and old fogeys like me just have to live with it.

(My preferred pronouns are "I/me/my". I think of myself as male, but that matters mostly when I go to the bathroom or have sex, while being first-person matters when I do anything. If you're talking to me, please use "you/your". If you're talking about me in my absence, that's between you and the person you're talking to; I'm not there so I don't care. Grump, grump. You kids, get off my lawn.)
sixbeforelunch: tos era spock, text reads "fascinating" (trek - spock - fascinating)

[personal profile] sixbeforelunch 2023-02-03 05:25 pm (UTC)(link)

we have a perfectly good gender-neutral singular pronoun that everyone already knows, so why not use it wherever we need a gender-neutral singular pronoun?

Are you referring to 'it'? I'm torn on that one. On the one hand, I've read a lot of sci-fi where 'it' is used to refer to sapient non-gendered beings and it quickly fades into the background for me in a way that 'they' never manages to. OTOH, even in sci-fi 'it' almost always refers to a non-human and the word has such a long history of being used to de-humanize people. I can see why most people who want to use non-gendered pronouns would not want to open themselves up to being called 'it'.

If 'it' is un-reclaimable, my preference is for English to ditch gendered pronouns altogether and for 'ey/em/eir' to take over as a universal non-gendered pronoun. It's just they with the 'th' lopped off, so the declension is easy enough. In speech 'they' and 'ey' are so similar that there might be some confusion, but I find I don't get confused by the singular 'they' in speech, only text. (Plus, in a conversation, you can generally clarify with the person you're speaking to.) 'Ey' and 'they' are clearly different in text, and I suspect that if someone wrote a book which ditched all gendered pronouns and used only 'ey' for singular and 'they' for plural, I'd get used to it pretty quickly and soon stop noticing. (I genuinely stopped noticing 'per/pers/perself' when I read Marge Piercy's Woman on the Edge of Time and that one's a good deal more jarring on first glance.)

blur the grammatically-useful distinction of number.

The widespread acceptance of the singular 'they' and loss of the numerical distinction reminds me a little of when English dropped 'thou'. It was a good thing, in that we no longer have to worry about rank and debate if we're close enough to someone to refer to them as 'thou' but at the same time, we lost a useful distinction between a singular second person and a plural second person. It would have been nice if we could have lost the rank/closeness signifier and just accepted 'thou' as always singular and 'you' as always plural and then we wouldn't be stuck with occasional kludgy phrases like 'you guys' and 'you all', but that's not how English evolved and it still works, so. But, as you say, at a certain point you're shoveling against the tide and just have to accept that the language is what it is.

hudebnik: (Default)

[personal profile] hudebnik 2023-02-04 02:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Exactly. People associate "it" with "non-human". Why? Because individual humans are always referred to by gendered pronouns. (For some reason English doesn't have gendered plural pronouns.) Why? Because when the English language developed, it was taken for granted that every human is either male or female, not both, not neither, not "why does it matter?" Once you drop that assumption, there's no longer any reason to always refer to people by gendered pronouns, and therefore no reason to associate "it" with "non-human", and therefore no reason not to use "it" for individual humans whose gender is unknown, irrelevant, ambiguous, or non-existent.

But that's logic speaking, and this isn't about logic. Even people passionately committed to using gender-neutral pronouns have an apparently unbreakable emotional association of "it" with "non-human", and don't want to adopt "it" for themselves or their friends for fear that it demeans them.

Of course, if we used a gender-neutral pronoun whenever the person's gender was irrelevant to the discussion, we'd quickly discover that that covers about 99% of the time, and gendered pronouns would fade from use altogether, and would appear in the dictionary with an "archaic" annotation. Which would be fine with me.
Edited 2023-02-04 14:22 (UTC)
peristaltor: (Default)

[personal profile] peristaltor 2023-02-05 08:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Eh, I think it would be harder for me to refer to a human as an "it" that it would to get the wrong pronoun, plural or not. Some habits were beaten into us as youngsters.

At one point, calling someone an "it" was a grievous insult.
hudebnik: (Default)

[personal profile] hudebnik 2023-02-06 12:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, when I was a child, calling someone "it" was an insult. So was calling a boy "she" or (I presume) calling a girl "he", because schoolchildren are so good at finding ways to insult one another.

Calling a singular person "they" was never an insult, it merely demonstrated the speaker's stupidity or lack of education. Which is why I still have a hard time doing it even when intelligent, well-educated people around me are doing so.
Edited 2023-02-06 12:54 (UTC)
peristaltor: (Orson Approves)

[personal profile] peristaltor 2023-02-06 07:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Calling a singular person "they" was never an insult, it merely demonstrated the speaker's stupidity or lack of education.

Exactly!
maju: Clean my kitchen (Default)

[personal profile] maju 2023-02-02 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Fewer data just sounds ridiculous.
l33tminion: (Bookhead (Nagi))

[personal profile] l33tminion 2023-02-02 05:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, it's not "one datum", "two data", you use an ancillary count noun like "pieces" or "items". And it's definitely "less data", not "fewer data".

"Fewer" being limited to countable things seems sound? "Less" being limited to non-countable things, on the other hand, is on real shaky ground descriptively. I wouldn't be surprised if one day "fewer" falls out of use enough that it's marked as archaic.
peristaltor: (Default)

[personal profile] peristaltor 2023-02-05 08:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah. Data has that… qualitative quality, based not on it's measurable piles but on its usefulness.
hamsterwoman: (find x)

[personal profile] hamsterwoman 2023-02-02 05:16 pm (UTC)(link)
"Fewer data" just sounds wrong! Fewer data POINTS, sure, there's your countable noun alternative if you want it, but data is definitely a mass noun. It's like rice and grains of rice! (I know it is actually the plural of datum, but that doesn't matter and also nobody uses "datum" that way.)
fred_mouse: line drawing of sheep coloured in queer flag colours with dream bubble reading 'dreamwidth' (Default)

[personal profile] fred_mouse 2023-02-03 02:42 am (UTC)(link)

^this!

Although, I once had an older data data scientist who had learnt Latin at school argue something about how the general assumptions about data/datum are Wrong!, but I have no memory of what the correct detail was, just the conclusion that I could go on the way I was and be comfortable knowing that even those who knew Latin disagreed with each other

hamsterwoman: (ploskost passazhira)

[personal profile] hamsterwoman 2023-02-03 04:54 am (UTC)(link)
and be comfortable knowing that even those who knew Latin disagreed with each other

Hehe, I like having that additional datum data point :D
topaz_eyes: (Leonard Cohen song)

[personal profile] topaz_eyes 2023-02-02 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Eh, I'll stay on the "less or fewer" hill, because "less" is a mass adjective, and "fewer" is a count adjective. Sand is a mass noun, so we say less sand. We don't say "fewer sand," that's just wrong. But if we're referring to grains of sand, we say fewer, because it refers to grains and we can count the grains. But that's just me.

It's like less data, and fewer data points.

[personal profile] ahazelshadeofwinter 2023-02-03 06:32 am (UTC)(link)
I'm OK with using "fewer" with count nouns; the thing that will never stop driving me up a tree is when it's hypercorrected to be used with *mass* nouns. I've never seen "fewer data," but there are writers who seem convinced that "fewer" should be used with any phrase that has a number in it, even if that number is measuring a continuous quantity and not counting discrete items at all. "Fewer than five miles away"--augh!! "Fewer than fifty percent of the respondents polled"--no, you're not counting the respondents, you're measuring the proportion of them as compared to the total. I'm willing to give up "fewer" entirely if it will make this stop.
frandroid: "The Tentacle goes where?" in front of Buffy and Willow looking at a computer monitor (buffy)

[personal profile] frandroid 2023-02-02 06:20 pm (UTC)(link)
When you have enough hills, you get upgraded to intending to die on a hill chain.
cactuswatcher: (Default)

[personal profile] cactuswatcher 2023-02-02 06:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Call it a weird dialect of English. If people want to play sophomoric pseudo Latin games, and use "data" as a plural of "datum," we can't really stop them. They aren't going to listen to us. As far as I can tell the words "data" and "datum" aren't that closely related in general English usage. Personally I don't think there is such a thing as a datum (in the meaning of a unique indivisible piece of data) and therefore always use piece of or item of data.
agoodwinsmith: (Default)

[personal profile] agoodwinsmith 2023-02-02 10:22 pm (UTC)(link)
AaaaahhhhhOOOooooogah!
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2023-02-02 06:40 pm (UTC)(link)
If "fewer data" sounds wrong, "fewer pieces of data" sounds OK to me.
sabotabby: (books!)

[personal profile] sabotabby 2023-02-02 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
*galaxy brain moment*
james: (Default)

[personal profile] james 2023-02-02 10:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I intend to die on the following hills:

You don't pluralise a word by adding apostrophe s.
Dialogue and action plus the beginning of a new paragraph - when to do it and when to not do it.
A drabble is 100 words.
No, Mulder/Skully is NOT SLASH. Slash does not mean "not canon".
james: (Default)

[personal profile] james 2023-02-03 01:33 pm (UTC)(link)
I never watched the show, I'm allowed to misspelled her name. ;-) But I rage at the clouds anyhow!
crystalpyramid: (Default)

[personal profile] crystalpyramid 2023-02-03 01:03 am (UTC)(link)
I am not entirely convinced that "fewer" is a real word at all. It seems like it might be a hoax.
antisoppist: (Default)

[personal profile] antisoppist 2023-02-03 08:57 am (UTC)(link)
For some of my work I have to follow the EU's style guide and I notice they have given up and say "Data can be used as a plural or a singular noun".

I imagine heated battles between people of different nations all taught slightly different English at school, plus native English speakers and someone eventually going "Fine! You can all be right!"
andrewducker: (Default)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2023-02-03 10:10 am (UTC)(link)
*loud cheering*
peristaltor: (Accuse!)

[personal profile] peristaltor 2023-02-05 08:49 pm (UTC)(link)
The latest Hill I intend to defend is "irony:" It cannot be intentional.

If it is intentional, it is "sarcasm." True Irony must be unintentional, based on an incorrect assumption. I know, common usage has moved on… but in the wrong direction.

There. I said it. I hope that defuses hipsters everywhere.