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  2. Is "guy" gender-neutral? - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/11816

    14. TL;DR - 'guy' is not gender neutral. 'You guys' is accepted in colloquial speech to fill in the lack of a common subject in the second person plural. It is not acceptable to use that phrase in writing or formal speech. The word 'guy' is not gender neutral, let's start there. It very much only refers to the male gender.

  3. Guys” can be used in English as gender neutral to refer to a group of mixed gender. You will even hear women refer to other women as “guys.” The closest linguistic equivalent with a feminine tilt would be “gals.” “Guys and gals” is a rather informal variant of “ladies and gentlemen.” (Note the reverse order.)

  4. When did the word "guys" become popular as a gender-neutral word?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/430448/when-did-the-word-guys-become...

    In some varieties of US and Canadian English, you guys revives the distinction between a singular and plural you, much like y'all in other varieties; in this sense, guys is gender-neutral. You can also read there how the etymology really goes back to Guy Fawkes and that in earlier centuries, a woman dressed like a guy most likely wasn't in a ...

  5. The use of the apostrophe defines ownership of one or more people. So, if there is only one "guy" involved, the phrase would be "your guy's favorite cars." If, however, there is more than one "guy" involved, the phrase would be "your guys' favorite cars." Welcome to ELU.SE. alissam912, while your answer is fitting, this site strives to provide ...

  6. One thing I noticed is that we are all "guys" in the office: "Ask the guy up there." "Call the guys of help desk." "Guys, we need to manage this now." "Who is the guy who said that?" "We need to tell this to all the other guys." Apart from some managers that says "Gentlemen" everybody else use only "guy".

  7. 12. Regardless of the various permutations being thrown around these days, the correct possessive of you guys is you guys’, spoken or written, and I quote (emphasis mine): To form the possessive case of a plural noun ending in s, add only the apostrophe. Since you guys is a plural noun, it is subject to the above rule, which has no exception ...

  8. “You Guys” or “You, Guys” [closed] - English Language & Usage ...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/333837/you-guys-or-you-guys

    It combines with "guys" to form the subject you guys. It's the determinative counterpart of the 2nd person plural pronoun "you", and denotes a set that includes the addressee, but not the speaker. If a comma is used, as in You, the students should form a society "you" and "the students" are in supplementary apposition, and "you" has the status ...

  9. How to say hello to a group of people? [closed]

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/112941

    In a colloquial register, one often says “Hi guys”, and one uses this irrespective of the gender distribution in the group addressed. A more Southern-sounding version is “Hey y’all”. An extremely informal version is “Hello people”. In a more formal register, “Good morning/afternoon/evening, ladies and gentlemen” is the ...

  10. grammar - Possessive form of "you guys" - English Language &...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/290177/possessive-form-of-you-guys

    Elsewhere, it should simply be your. "youse guys'" . What I hear is “you guys’s” (not “your guys’s”). And correctness is a non-issue in contexts/registers that admit of anything so slangy as “you guys” in the first place. The guy's trousers are on fire - one guy. The guys' trousers are on fire - more than one guy.

  11. What is the correct possessive form of "One of the guys"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/241823

    One of the guys is one guy among a group of the guys. Adding an apostrophe forms the possessive plural guys': One of the guys' swords. The word guys' is possessive plural, and the meaning of the sentence is ambiguous, depending on whether one modifies swords or guys: One sword from a group of swords belonging to the guys. Or