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I could hear my journalism adviser's tongue clicking: "Jerr, Jerr -- if they 'reign' then they ARE 'supreme' -- you don't need BOTH words!" Your journalism adviser didn't understand much about the workings of the English language, did he? the nurse's we
Some languages distinguish between an inclusive we and an exclusive we, depending on whether second person is part of the we or not. The nurse's we is a whole nother kind of we; it excludes the first person.
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stranger
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stranger
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I had a question about the royal we. Long ago in school, I remember being taught that when a monarch used the royal we, he was referring to "himself and god," speaking for both, as part of his whole "divine right to rule" deal. Later, in discussing it with linguistically-excited friends, I heard a different explanation: the royal we means "the monarch and the country as a whole," since, as the country's leader, he's speaking for everyone. What do you think or know or feel about this? Who exactly is the "we" meant to be, specifically in the instance when a monarch is using it?
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old hand
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old hand
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And we will weep To be so alone We are lost! We can never go home
From Gollums song. That would be the Preciousian We...
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Carpal Tunnel
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I had a question about the royal we. Long ago in school, I remember being taught that when a monarch used the royal we, he was referring to "himself and god," speaking for both, as part of his whole "divine right to rule" deal. Later, in discussing it with linguistically-excited friends, I heard a different explanation: the royal we means "the monarch and the country as a whole," since, as the country's leader, he's speaking for everyone. What do you think or know or feel about this? Who exactly is the "we" meant to be, specifically in the instance when a monarch is using it? here is wikipedia's take, fwiw (not much, as it has both explanations marked [citation needed]). - joe [situation wanted] friday
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Or either it's just the same impulse that drove us to the singular 'you', which originally was used to people higher in social status to the speaker. How far back can we trace the royal we in English?
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once upon a time I waited tables, and a customer (who was alone) said something like, "we would like blah, blah..." I replied, "oh, is that the royal we?", and he said, "no, I just took that."
heh
formerly known as etaoin...
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Or either it's just the same impulse that drove us to the singular 'you', which originally was used to people higher in social status to the speaker. How far back can we trace the royal we in English? ' We şæt ellenweorc estum miclum, feohtan fremedon, frecne geneğdon eafoğ uncuşes..' - joe (if you consider Beowulf to be English) friday
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stranger
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Nosism: The use of 'we' in referring to oneself – would it also be called nosism if using 'we' to refer to someone else (other than oneself)? The Dean of our College always addresses me thusly, "How we doin'?" (instead of the standard "How are you doing?"). I don't think he intends it as a corporate inquiry (i.e. keeping a pulse on the College and student life at large) but rather just a friendly personal greeting directly to me (he's a farm boy from Oklahoma so maybe it's a colloquialism). Is referring to oneself in the third person also a form of nosism? For example, there was a whole episode of Seinfeld in which George Costanza begins referring to himself in the third person ("George is getting upset!") after picking up on the conversation patterns of another character who does the same ("Jimmy likes you!" says Jimmy to Elaine who has mistaken another guy who she likes as Jimmy not realizing that the guy addressing her is using the third person.)
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Carpal Tunnel
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The Dean of our College always addresses me thusly, "How we doin'?" (instead of the standard "How are you doing?"). I don't think he intends it as a corporate inquiry (i.e. keeping a pulse on the College and student life at large) but rather just a friendly personal greeting directly to me (he's a farm boy from Oklahoma so maybe it's a colloquialism).
That would be the nurse's we.
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stranger
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There's also the "Mommy We"--a speech artifact that did not impress my daughter, even as a preschooler. To my "We're going to pick up our toys now," she responded, "But the 'I' of 'we' doesn't want to!"
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