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{{OtherIdentity|also_called=Traditional pronouns, "normal pronouns" (by transphobes), trad pronouns, paleopronouns, archipronouns|image1=File:Exipronouns.png|caption1=|title1=Exipronoun|type=[[Pronoun]] type}}'''Exipronouns''', '''paleopronouns''', '''archpronouns''' or '''trad pronouns''' is a term to refer to the “standard” naturally/traditionally existing [[pronoun]] sets of a language. They are the opposite of [[Neopronoun|neopronouns]]. In English, exipronouns are '''he/him''', '''she/her''', and '''they/them''', as well as it/its (though some people may consider "'''it'''" a neopronoun, since it's not standard usage when referring to a person).
[[File:Exipronoun.ogg]]
==Grammar==
Pronouns ''(antōnymía)'' are listed as one of eight parts of speech in ''The Art of Grammar'',<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pronoun#Grammar</ref> a treatise on Greek grammar attributed to Dionysius Thrax and dating from the 2nd century BC. The pronoun is described there as "a part of speech substitutable for a noun and marked for a person." Pronouns continued to be regarded as a part of speech in Latin grammar (the Latin term being ''pronomen'', from which the English name – through Middle French – ultimately derives), and thus in the European tradition generally.
[[Category:Conformant Term]][[Category:Pronoun]][[Category:Terminology]]
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[[Category:Needs Etymology]]