In addition, writers can often avoid the problem of gender-neutral singular pronouns by revising a sentence to make the subject plural: Walden University prides itself as an inclusive institution serving a diverse population of students. Walden is committed to broadening the university`s understanding of inclusion and diversity and will now accept gender-neutral pronouns in the student letter. This practice pays tribute to the recent confirmation of singular „they“ by the APA and also includes alternative pronouns that are currently circulating (. B for example, the nominative xes, ve, ze/zir, ey and zhe and the releases associated with them). Walden acknowledges that the debate on gender identity is ongoing. As such, the university will accept any pronoun in student letters, provided it can be shown that it is accepted as a respectful term by the community that represents them. But it seems strange to have a punch bowl next to the nominaire expression. The verb sounds better: in Hungarian, verbs have a polypersonal concordance, which means that they correspond to more than one of the arguments of the verb: not only its subject, but also its object (precision). There is a difference between the case where a particular object is present and the case where the object is indeterminate or if there is no object at all. (Adverbs have no influence on the form of the verb.) Examples: Szeretek (I love someone or something indeterminate), szeretem (I love him, she, or her, or her, specifically), szeretlek (I love you); szeret (he loves me, me, you, someone or something indeterminate), szereti (he loves him, her or her especially).
Of course, names or pronouns can specify the exact object. In short, there is agreement between a verb and the person and the number of its subject and the specificity of its object (which often refers more or less precisely to the person). Class and number are indicated with prefixes (or sometimes their absence) that are not always the same for subtantifs, adjectives and verbs, as the examples illustrate. In some situations, there is also an agreement between the nouns and their qualifiers and their modifiers. This is common in languages such as French and Spanish, where articles, determinants and adjectives (both attribute and predictive) correspond in number to the names that qualify them: such a concordance is also found with predictors: the man is great („man is great“) vs. the chair is large („the chair is great“). (In some languages, such as German. B, that is not the case; only the attribute modifiers show the agreement.) If the subject of the sentence is plural, the pronoun also becomes pluralistic in the sentence. Exceptions: fraction or percentage can be singular or plural, based on the following noun.