It (pronoun)
Template:Short description Template:Italic title In Modern English, it is a singular, neuter, third-person pronoun.
Morphology
In Modern English, it has only three shapes representing five word forms:<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref>
- it: the nominative (subjective) and accusative (objective) forms. (The accusative case is also called the "oblique".<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp)
- its: the dependent and independent genitive (possessive) forms
- itself: the reflexive and intensive form
Historically, though, the morphology is more complex.
History
Old English
Template:FurtherOld English had a single third-person pronoun – from the Proto-Germanic demonstrative base *khi-, from PIE *ko- "this"<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> – which had a plural and three genders in the singular. The modern pronoun it developed out of the neuter, singular. The older pronoun had the following forms:
| Singular | Plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine | Neuter | Feminine | ||
| Nominative | hē | hit | hēo | hī(e) |
| Accusative | hine | hit | hīe | hī(e) |
| Dative | him | him | hire | him / heom |
| Genitive | his | his | hire | hira / heora |
This neuter pronoun, like the masculine and feminine ones, was used for both people and objects (inanimate or abstract). Common nouns in Anglo-Saxon had grammatical genders, which were not necessarily the same as the gender of the person(s) referred to (though they tended to accord with the endings of the words). For instance, Old-English Template:Transliteration (the ancestor of "child", pronounced "chilled") is neuter, as are both Template:Transliteration and Template:Transliteration, literally "male-child" and "female-child" (grammatical gender survives here; some 21st-century English speakers still use "it" with "child", see below).
The word Template:Transliteration, (which meant "female", ancestor of "wife" as in "fishwife"), is also neuter. Template:Transliteration ("Man") was grammatically male, but [[Man (word)|meant "a person", and could, like Template:Transliteration, be qualified with a gender]]. Template:Transliteration (variant Template:Transliteration, ancestor of "woman") meant "female person" and was grammatically masculine, like its last element, Template:Transliteration, and like Template:Transliteration (variant Template:Transliteration, "male person").<ref name="concise"/><ref>Template:Cite journal (weak source, but supports only the spelling variants given for clarity)</ref> Archbishop Ælfric's Latin vocabulary gives three Anglo-Saxon words for an intersex person, Template:Transliteration (dialectical "skratt", grammatically masculine), Template:Transliteration (grammatically feminine, like its last element, Template:Transliteration), and Template:Transliteration (grammatically masculine).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Similarly, because Template:Transliteration is feminine, so are Template:Transliteration (inhabitants of a region), Template:Transliteration (inhabitants of heaven), and Template:Transliteration (inhabitants of hell). Template:Transliteration is neuter, Template:Transliteration feminine, and both mean "the Angles, the English people". Nouns for inanimate objects and abstract concepts also had (grammatical) genders.<ref name="concise">Template:Cite book</ref> Mark Twain parodied this grammatical structure (which exists in many languages like German) by rendering it literally into modern English:<ref>Deutscher 2005 pp. 41–42</ref>
About half of the world's languages have gender, and there is a continuum between those with more grammatical gender (based on word form, or quite arbitrary), and those with more natural gender (based on word meaning).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The concept of natural gender was beginning to develop in Old English, occasionally conflicting with the established grammatical gender. This development was, however, mostly to take place later, in Middle English.<ref name="origins"/>
Middle English (1066–1400s)
In the 12th century, it started to separate and appear without an h. Around the same time, one case was lost, and distinct pronouns started to develop, so that by the 15th century (late Middle English), the forms of it were as follows:
- Nominative: (h)it
- Accusative: (h)it / him
- Genitive: his
- Reflexive:(h)it self. Also -selfe, -selve(n), -silf, -sijlfe, sometimes without a space.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
During the Middle English period, grammatical gender was gradually replaced with natural gender in English.<ref name="origins">Template:Cite book</ref>
Modern English (a bit before 1550–present)
Middle English gradually gave way to Modern English in the early 16th century. The hit form continued well into the 16th century but had disappeared before the 17th in formal written English.<ref name=":0" />Template:Rp Genitive its appeared in the later 16th century and had taken over by the middle of the 17th, by which time it had its modern form.<ref name=":0" />Template:Rp "Hit" remains in some dialects in stressed positions only; some dialects also use "it", not "its", as a possessive.<ref name="origins_hit">Template:Cite book</ref>
Gender
It is considered to be neuter or impersonal/non-personal in gender. In Old English, (h)it was the neuter nominative and accusative form of hē. But by the 17th century, the old gender system, which marked gender on common nouns and adjectives, as well as pronouns, had disappeared, leaving only pronoun marking. At the same time, a new relative pronoun system was developing that eventually split between personal relative who<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and impersonal relative which.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":1" />Template:Rp As a result, some scholars consider it to belong to the impersonal gender, along with relative which and interrogative what.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Syntax
Functions
It can appear as a subject, object, determiner or a predicative complement.<ref name=":1" /> The reflexive form also appears as an adjunct. It very seldom appears as a modifier.
- Subject: It's there; it being there; its being there; it allows for itself to be there.
- Object: I saw it; I pointed her to it; It connects to itself.
- Predicative complement: In our attempt to fight evil, we have become it; It took more than ten years it, to fully become itself.
- Determiner: I touched its top.
- Adjunct: It did it itself.
- Modifier: They were the it crowd.
Dummy it
Template:Main article A dummy pronoun is one that appears only for syntactic reasons and has no semantic value. One use of it is as a dummy pronoun (see also there) as in it's raining or it's clear that you understand.
In Old English, a subject was not required in the way it is today. As the subject requirement developed, there was a need for something to fill it with verbs taking zero arguments. Weather verbs such as rain or thunder were of this type, and, as the following example<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp shows, dummy it often took on this role.
Gif on sæternesdæg geðunrað, þaet tacnað demena and gerefena cwealm
If on saturn's-day thunders, that portends judges' and sheriffs' death
If it thunders on Saturday, that portends the deaths of judges and sheriffs
But these were not the only such verbs. Most of the verbs used without a subject or with the dummy it belong to one of the following semantic groups:
- (a) Events or happenings (chance, happen, befall, etc.)
- (b) Seeming or appearance (seem, think, become, etc.)
- (c) Sufficiency or lack (lack, need, suffice, etc.)
- (d) Mental processes or states (like, list, grieve, please, repent, rue, etc.)<ref name=":0" />Template:Rp
And examples still remain, such as the expression suffice it to say.
The same use of dummy it exists in cleft constructions, such as it's obvious that you were there.
Dependents
Pronouns rarely take dependents, but it is possible for it to have many of the same kind of dependents as other noun phrases.
- Relative clause modifier: That's not the it that I meant; *That's not it that I meant.
- Determiner: That's not the it that I meant; *That's not the it.
- Adverb phrase external modifier: not even itself
Semantics
It is used to denote an inanimate physical object, abstract concept, situation, action, characteristic, and almost any other concept or being, including, occasionally, humans.
It is usually definite and specific, but it can also have no referent at all (See Dummy it). It can be debatable whether a particular use is a dummy it or not (for instance: "Who is it?"—"It's me!").
Samuel Taylor Coleridge proposed using it in a wider sense in all the situations where a gender-neutral pronoun might be desired: Template:Cquote
The children's author E. Nesbit consistently wrote in this manner, often of mixed groups of children: "Everyone got its legs kicked or its feet trodden on in the scramble to get out of the carriage."<ref>Five Children and It, p. 1.</ref> This usage (but in all capital letters, as if an acronym) also occurs in District of Columbia police reports.
Some people use it as a gender-neutral pronoun.<ref name="gendercensus2021">Template:Cite web</ref>
Pronunciation
According to the OED, the following pronunciations are used:
| Form | IPA | Recording |
|---|---|---|
| it | /ɪt/ | |
| its | /ɪts/ | |
| itself | (UK)/ɪtˈsɛlf/
(US)/ᵻtˈsɛlf/ |
Popular culture
- Stephen King's 1986 book It is about a shape shifting, malevolent entity that often manifests as a clown.
- In games of tag, the person trying to tag others is known as it.
See also
Notes
References
External links
- William Malone Baskervill and James Witt Sewel, An English Grammar Template:Webarchive, 1896.
- On some Philological Peculiarities in the English Authorized Version of the Bible. By Thomas Watts, Esq.
- 'It', The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth edition, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000).
Template:Modern English personal pronouns Template:English gender-neutral pronouns