| "Harper presented to Jessica and she was confused." vs "Harper presented to Jessica and they were confused." "Harper presented to James and he was confused." vs
"Harper presented to James and they were confused." "Harper presented to Sam and he was confused." vs
"Harper presented to Sam and they were confused." "Harper presented to Sam and she was confused." vs
"Harper presented to Sam and they were confused." "Harper presented to the board and they were confused." vs
"Harper presented to the board and they were confused." I'm all for calling people what they want but to assume that it doesn't add context in a lot of situations isn't accurate either. Better practice (imo) would be to use peoples names more. "Harper presented to Jessica and Jessica was confused." "Harper presented to James and James was confused." "Harper presented to Sam and Sam was confused." "Harper presented to Sam and Harper was confused." "Harper presented to the board and the board was confused." |
"Harper presented to Jessica and she was confused."
"Harper presented to James and she was confused."
"Harper presented to Sam and she was confused."
"Harper presented to Sam and he was confused."
"Harper presented to the board and they were confused."
I mean, no chance in hell making a switch like that by fiat. It just sounds so wrong. But if I were greenfielding a language, I think that would be a nice feature.