Tossup

The “disjunctive” or “tonic” form of these words can be the object complement or be added for emphasis. In contrast to other Romance languages, these words are added to the end of reflexive (-5[1])verbs in Spanish. The choice of these words is determined by context in languages with the T-V distinction. In Japanese, examples of these words like “boku” and “watashi” (10[1])can convey different levels of formality. The Spanish “elle” (“EH-yay”) is a gender-neutral “neo-” one of these words. Most Romance languages drop words from this part of speech (10[1])when they’re heavily implied, as with “yo” in Spanish. For 10 points, words in what part of speech include “they” and “them?” ■END■

ANSWER: pronouns [accept personal pronouns; accept disjunctive or tonic pronouns; accept neopronouns; accept gender-neutral pronouns; prompt on nouns]
<Chicago B, Social Science>
= Average correct buzz position

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Buzzes


Summary

TournamentEditionTUHConv. %Neg %Average Buzz
UK (North)UK5100%0%59.20
UK (South)UK8100%13%57.25
Northern CaliforniaUS4100%0%50.00
Southern CaliforniaUS7100%14%55.14
Eastern Canada (1)US4100%25%69.75
FloridaUS4100%0%55.25
Great LakesUS10100%30%65.10
Lower Mid-AtlanticUS9100%22%61.00
Upper Mid-AtlanticUS11100%9%58.64
Upper Mid-AtlanticUS1100%0%50.00
MidwestUS9100%11%57.11
NorthUS4100%0%61.25
NortheastUS2100%50%73.50
PacificUS8100%25%69.88
SoutheastUS12100%17%59.50
Upstate NYUS5100%20%62.00