Pam Nelson has a note on her
blog lamenting the cave-in
by James Kilpatrick on the sloppy use of plural
pronouns with singular nouns. Mr. Kilpatrick has
given up the fight against using “they”
and “their” as pronouns for “everyone.”
But Pam Nelson isn’t ready to surrender. She
writes: “As long as we use a singular verb
for "everyone," we should use also a singular
pronoun.”
I’m with you, Ms. Nelson. We ought not to let
sloppy writers win on this.
Yes, usage changes, and yes, this error is
widespread. But so are many errors. Sometimes it
appears that half the writers in the nation’s
papers don’t know when to use “lay” instead
of “laid” or why “give the report to Jim and I”
is bad grammar.
It’s the job of editors—people who do know
grammar, or should—to correct such atrocities,
not to accept them because “everybody does
it.”
Pardon me if this sounds elitist, but standards
of usage and grammar ought to be set and
maintained by people who are knowledgeable and
competent, not by the lazy, the ignorant and the
incompetent.