- “That has been the standard relative pronoun for about eight hundred years and can be used in speaking of persons, animals, or things. . . . Three hundred years ago who also became popular as a relative. It was used in speaking of persons and animals but not of things. . . . Who may in time drive out that as a relative referring to persons, but it has not yet done so. . . . That may still be used in speaking of a person, as in the child that has been subject to nagging is in perpetual terror.” Bergen Evans & Cornelia Evans, A Dictionary of Contemporary American Usage 555 (1957).
- “Since when is that rather than who permissible in referring to persons? The answer, of course, is: since the language was in its infancy.” Theodore M. Bernstein, Miss Thistlebottom’s Hobgoblins: The Careful Writer’s Guide to the Taboos, Bugbears and Outmoded Rules of English Usage 81 (1971).
- “Of these relative pronouns, . . . that [refers] to things and persons; who to persons only.” Eric Partridge, Usage and Abusage 375 (1982).
- “Down through the centuries, that has often been used with a human antecedent. Chaucer, Langland, and Wyclif are all cited in the OED using that in this way, and examples are also given from writers in each of the later centuries.” R.W. Burchfield, The New Fowler’s Modern English Usage 773 (3d ed. 1996).
- “Who . . . normally refers to a person . . . . That refers to a person, animal, or thing . . . .” Bryan A. Garner, “Grammar and Usage,” in The Chicago Manual of Style § 5.54, at 218 (16th ed. 2010).
LawProse Lesson #124
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Professor Garner, in the last sentence of today’s lesson, you use the phrase “don’t be one of those people who insist . . . .” Shouldn’t the word “insist” have an “s” at the end? Doesn’t the verb “insist” relate back to the noun “one” rather than “people”?
“As of 2003, misusing ‘that’ for ‘who’ or ‘whom,’ whether in writing or speech, functions as a kind of class-marker–it’s the grammatical equivalent of wearing NASCAR paraphernalia or liking pro wrestling.”
– DFW
If you have a choice, why not just go with the more precise? Peradventure the people that wrote English 800 years ago would prefer the human-centric “who,” too, if they were writing today. Nod to your sources and reasoning, but disagree for contemporary writing.