Vitalik Buterin pfp
Vitalik Buterin
@vitalik.eth
Another linguistics note: Has anyone else noticed how eliding the subject (in this case "I") seems to have become more and more acceptable in English over the last 10 years? Wonder if anyone has written about this trend.
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Andrei O. pfp
Andrei O.
@andrei0x309
Like somebody else mentioned I guess this is a function of character limits. From my experience is pretty rare and just because Elon does it doesn't mean it has reached the acceptable status.
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Thomas pfp
Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Interestingly, Latin and its closest descendants (Italian, Portuguese, Spanish) make the subject pronoun optional because the conjugation of the verb makes it obvious. In French, which is also quite close to Latin, or English, which borrows ~80% of its words from Latin, pronouns have been non-optional until this trend
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Trish🫧 pfp
Trish🫧
@trish
I do it. It’s a bad habit. I don’t know where I picked it up but, like passive voice, I try to edit it before sending. Like passive voice, it separates the the individual from the action in some way. I’m both guilty but not proud.
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Ayush pfp
Ayush
@shuklaayush
Found this article. Think it’s called “left edge deletion” and is a type of pro-dropping https://slate.com/human-interest/2016/05/all-your-questions-about-pronoun-deletion-and-the-inexorable-death-of-the-universe-answered.html
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binji 🔴 pfp
binji 🔴
@binji.eth
Imo it’s because of the internet - character limits/low attention spans - linguistic convergence from various languages, cultures, styles converging in one ungoverned place (no defacto spell checks or ‘linguistic style laws’ are imposed on social media vs other writing mediums like academia, newspapers, etc)
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Mac Budkowski ᵏ pfp
Mac Budkowski ᵏ
@macbudkowski
also writing with lower case only became more popular
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FarcasterMarketing pfp
FarcasterMarketing
@quillingqualia.eth
Will write about it someday. Am busy rn
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tldr (tim reilly) pfp
tldr (tim reilly)
@tldr
Could be related to fact that to social media and text messaging natives, a certain “formality” can be considered a sign of aggression https://brands.wattpad.com/insights/the-new-rules-for-writing-for-gen-z-how-to-avoid-passive-aggressive-punctuation-and-other-lessons-from-an-internet-linguist?hs_amp=true
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Colin Johnson 💭 pfp
Colin Johnson 💭
@cojo.eth
I have to consciously go back through emails frequently and add in I - sometimes it seems a little too off-hand. Lots of senior folks at Amex/Apple did this to “get to the point” in short emails.
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gilles pfp
gilles
@gilles
example of how language tends to organically evolve towards the simplest viable form but trajectory is slowed by grammar rules imposed through schooling e.g. German still has grammatical cases (genitive etc.) because rules institutionalized by Luther Bible (1534), while Dutch evolved to work only with prepositions
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Britt Kim pfp
Britt Kim
@brittkim.eth
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antimo 🎩 pfp
antimo 🎩
@antimofm.eth
I did notice When I was writing my book I read several style guides. I learned to keep an eye out for how many sentences begin with "I" (too many) It's a good cue to vary your writing Just removing the "I" is the easy way out 😂
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Matt Garcia pfp
Matt Garcia
@mattgarcia.eth
all languages evolve towards simplicity plus 'am' leaves no room for doubt that the speaker is 'i' (unlike 'is' and 'are') so it's all quite natural
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Meg pfp
Meg
@meganmichelle.eth
I think this mostly applies to first person singular as “are” can get easily confused.
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jamesyoung.eth pfp
jamesyoung.eth
@jamesyoung
language is culture https://twitter.com/relevantmena/status/1688696989150478336?s=46
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William Saar pfp
William Saar
@saarw.eth
Personally like to do it because posts can feel a bit narcissistic when every sentence has an I or my. Would have skipped the Am as well
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Maybe Im Wasabi〽️ pfp
Maybe Im Wasabi〽️
@maybeimwasabi
When you exclude “I” it allows the reader to see themselves ie identify with the writing more easily (people love to talk about themselves etc.) It’s a contemporary, subtle, psychological sales tactic.
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chandresh 🪴 pfp
chandresh 🪴
@chandresh.eth
yeah, don't use it either
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Satoshi Tomatomoto pfp
Satoshi Tomatomoto
@tomato.eth
It sort of seems like a subconscious way of appealing to other people who might feel the same way. By omitting "I", your brain can fill it in with a "we".
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