All of them, depending on which of the 80 hyperbolillionth incarnations you consult.rezboyjoey said:The better question is: Which alignment is Batman?
I'm not sure if I've been ninja'd on this explanation or not, but I assume the reason that the pronoun "she" is used is because it's either directly pulling from, or in reference to, dungeons and dragons books where (at least as of the 3/3.5 edition) they used the pronoun she when describing a potentially gender neutral character. As far as the authors' of these books intent, I haven't the foggiest. Maybe it just looks nicer than (s)he and less likely to produce immature giggling than he/she.PureChaos said:i got neutral, which i agree with, but it's coming us 'she'...is it trying to tell me something?
in that case i'd assume it was referencing the books, if it wanted to be gender neutral it could have said 'you' which would have worked in all variations...i'm not that PC usually...i laugh at dead baby jokes!el_kabong said:I'm not sure if I've been ninja'd on this explanation or not, but I assume the reason that the pronoun "she" is used is because it's either directly pulling from, or in reference to, dungeons and dragons books where (at least as of the 3/3.5 edition) they used the pronoun she when describing a potentially gender neutral character. As far as the authors' of these books intent, I haven't the foggiest. Maybe it just looks nicer than (s)he and less likely to produce immature giggling than he/she.PureChaos said:i got neutral, which i agree with, but it's coming us 'she'...is it trying to tell me something?
SCREW IT, DOUBLE POST! that was my 4000th post WOOTNESS... please don't ban mePureChaos said:in that case i'd assume it was referencing the books, if it wanted to be gender neutral it could have said 'you' which would have worked in all variations...i'm not that PC usually...i laugh at dead baby jokes!el_kabong said:I'm not sure if I've been ninja'd on this explanation or not, but I assume the reason that the pronoun "she" is used is because it's either directly pulling from, or in reference to, dungeons and dragons books where (at least as of the 3/3.5 edition) they used the pronoun she when describing a potentially gender neutral character. As far as the authors' of these books intent, I haven't the foggiest. Maybe it just looks nicer than (s)he and less likely to produce immature giggling than he/she.PureChaos said:i got neutral, which i agree with, but it's coming us 'she'...is it trying to tell me something?