Pronouns.page icon
Pronouns.page icon

Pronouns.page

a source of information about nonbinary and gender neutral language.

Pronouns.page screenshot 1

Cost / License

  • Free
  • Open Source

Platforms

  • Online
-
No reviews
1like
0comments
0news articles

Features

Suggest and vote on features
No features, maybe you want to suggest one?

Pronouns.page News & Activities

Highlights All activities

Recent activities

No activities found.

Pronouns.page information

  • Developed by

    The “Neutral Language Council” Collective
  • Licensing

    Open Source and Free product.
  • Alternatives

    2 alternatives listed
  • Supported Languages

    • English
    • German
    • Estonian
    • French
    • Dutch
    • Polish
    • Romanian
    • Vietnamese
    • Russian
    • Chinese
    • Spanish
    • Norwegian Bokmål
    • Portuguese
    • Swedish
    • Arabic
    • Ukrainian
    • Japanese

AlternativeTo Category

Office & Productivity

Popular alternatives

View all
Pronouns.page was added to AlternativeTo by fghujlksakj on and this page was last updated .
No comments or reviews, maybe you want to be first?
Post comment/review

What is Pronouns.page?

What's the deal with pronouns?

Pronouns are those words that we use instead of calling someone by their name every time we mention them. Most people use “he/him” and “she/her”, so we automatically assume which one to call them based on someone's looks. But it's actually not that simple…

Gender is complicated. Some people “don't look like” their gender. Some prefer being called in a different way from what you'd assume. Some people don't fit into the boxes of “male” or “female” and prefer more neutral language.

This tool lets you share a link to your pronouns, with example sentences, so that you can show people how you like to be called.

Why does it matter? Because of simple human decency. You wouldn't call Ashley “Samantha” just because you like that name more or because “she looks like a Samantha to you”. Or even if she does have the name “Samantha” in her birth certificate but she absolutely hates it and prefers to use “Ashley”. And it's the exact same story with pronouns – if you don't want to be rude towards someone, please address them properly. The only difference is that we usually know names, but not pronouns. We introduce ourselves with a name, but not pronouns. Let's change that!

Official Links