Dictionnaire MEDIADICO  
 
Dictionnaire MediaDICO
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Accueil Dictionnaire MediaDICO Conditions d'utilisation Dictionnaire MediaDICO Nous contacter Dictionnaire MediaDICO Qui sommes nous ? Dictionnaire MediaDICO Plan du site
Dictionnaire MediaDICO
   
rubrique familial MEDIADICO Familial
rubrique word MEDIADICO Word 
rubrique entreprise MEDIADICO Entreprise
rubrique mobile MEDIADICO Mobile  
rubrique jeux MEDIADICO Jeux
  Dictionnaire MediaDICO
Dictionnaire MediaDICO
Dictionnaire MediaDICO MEDIADICO Entreprise
  Accueil
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Votre service
  Un outil simple et puissant
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Vos avantages
  Une offre tout compris
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Vos bénéfices
  Mieux communiquer
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Votre devis gratuit
  Un coût maîtrisé et transparent
Dictionnaire MediaDICO L'installation
  Une installation sans souci
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Les 10 dictionnaires
  Une bibliothèque francophone et
anglophone
   ▶ Définitions
   ▶ Homonymes - Paronymes
   ▶ Synonymes
   ▶ Style
   ▶ Conjugaisons
   ▶ Français-Anglais
   ▶ Anglais-Français
   ▶ Définitions anglaises
   ▶ Synonymes anglais
   ▶ Difficultés anglaises
   ▶ Votre glossaire interne
   ▶ Une ergonomie cognitive
   ▶ Les dictionnaires de langue
Dictionnaire MediaDICO MEDIADICO Entreprise
  Testez l'interface standard
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Les nouveautés
  Découvrez les nouvelles
fonctionnalités
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Web agencies
  Vous êtes prescripteur en solutions
intranet
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Conditions d'utilisation
   MEDIADICO Entreprise
Dictionnaire MediaDICO Nous contacter
 



Dictionnaire MediaDICO
Dictionnaire MediaDICO

La solution professionnelle pour disposer d'un service complet de dictionnaires francophones et anglophones sur l'intranet de votre entreprise

Dictionnaire MediaDICO
Les dictionnaires
Difficultés anglaises



Dictionnaire MediaDICO Dictionnaire MediaDICO
> his/her
The third personal masculine pronoun when used to indicate possession, as in "He has hurt his leg", "The boy has taken his books home" and "Where has your father left his tools?" Traditionally his was used to refer not only to masculine nouns, such as "man", "boy", etc, but to what are known as nouns "of dual gender". These include "architect", "artist", "parent", "passenger", "pupil" and "student". Without further information from the context it is not possible for the speaker or the writer to know the sex of the person referred to by one of these words. Formerly it was considered acceptable to use his in such situations, as in "Every pupil has to supply his own sports equipment" and "Every passenger is responsible for his own luggage". In modern usage this is now considered sexist and there is a modern convention that "his/her" should be used instead to avoid sexism, as in "Every pupil has to supply his/her own sports equipment" and "Every passenger is responsible for his/her own luggage". This convention is felt by some people to be clumsy, particularly when used in spoken or informal written English. Some people prefer to be ungrammatical and use the plural personal pronoun "their", as in "Every pupil must supply their own sports equipment" and "Every passenger is to be responsible for their own luggage". In some situations it is possible to avoid being sexist, clumsy and ungrammatical by rephrasing the sentence, as in "All pupils must supply their own sports equipment" and "All passengers are to be responsible for their own luggage.


Pour éviter fautes de grammaire, contresens et confusions
.
The English Usage Dictionary est le parfait complément des dictionnaires bilingues, du dictionnaire de définitions anglaises et du Thesaurus.
Ce dictionnaire signale toutes les difficultés que recèle l'usage d'un mot: orthographe, grammaire, prononciation, homonymies, etc.

Exemple d'article du dictionnaire English Usage Dictionary


Dictionnaire MediaDICO Copyright © 1987-2008 L'Aventure Multimedia Tous droits réservés | Nous contacter | Plan du site Dictionnaire MediaDICO