HISstory

>HISstory
>MANkind
>MAN-made

Why is the world so male-centric?

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Because men do shit outside the house.

>The english language is the world
Youre too stupid for this board. Please leave.

English is the unofficial lingua franca of the world. This is indisputable.

no chinese will be dominant language 2030.

if been hearing this since i was 5

tumblr get out

>not herstory

No it's French because Africa

>HISstory
This word comes from the french word: "histoire". In french "his" is: "son". Her: "sa".

>implying that women are kind
>implying that women make anything

Whenever i hear English speakers sperg out about their gender pronouns im further convinced english language is the dumbest language there is.

the question is why

You are wrong. En français a "son" is "un fils", but "history" does come from "histroire"
etymonline.com/index.php?allowed_in_frame=0&search=History

>bashes English for being a stupid language in English

What would be the point of doing it in another language? In any other language everyone would just agree and nobody would get butthurt. Youre clear proof its better to just say it in english.

That's what they said about Japanese in the 80's.

china is literally already dying

Well, yeah. Alternatives?

All languages are flawed anyway. English's flaws are just incredibly varied.

They hit a steel and industries burst because their neo-colonial bullshit isn't creating the markets they expected it to.

Y'all need to stop being such drama queens.

Why live when you can't push your luck running goods in Chiba City?

>the 80's cyberpunk dystopia of william gibson and muh animes will never come true
;_;

Shhhh, if we manage long enough for corporations to achieve more extra-national law privileges, it just might.

"His story" in french is: "Son histoire". I actually have no idea why I wrote "sa" for "Her" because it's also used for males if the noun is feminine.

"Son" in english is "fils" in french but "son" in french means his/her.

This thread got me thinking. Does anyone know why in French and German histoire and Gedichte means both "history" and "story," but there's no word in English that means both?

A vestige or oratory tradition, maybe?