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using second-person pronouns ("you") means listeners are more likely to be receptive to a message, rather than messages containing first-person plural pronouns ("we"). What's more, "you" pronouns ...
Unlike many other languages, English has no second-person plural. Words such as “y ... is “English’s fakest rule”, because pronouns do not split into subjects and objects as neatly ...
In Old Norse, the third-person plural pronoun was “thei/theim,” depending on whether used as a subject (thei) or an object (theim). Given its more distinct pronunciation from the Old English ...