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  2. Grammatical person - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_person

    First person includes the speaker (English: I, we), second person is the person or people spoken to (English: your or you), and third person includes all that are not listed above (English: he, she, it, they). [1] It also frequently affects verbs, and sometimes nouns or possessive relationships.

  3. Clusivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clusivity

    Horst J. Simon provides a deep analysis of second-person clusivity in his 2005 article. [2] He concludes that oft-repeated rumors regarding the existence of second-person clusivity—or indeed, any [+3] pronoun feature beyond simple exclusive we [8] – are ill-founded, and based on erroneous analysis of the data.

  4. Person - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person

    A person (pl.: people or persons, depending on context) is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations such as kinship, ownership of property, or legal responsibility.

  5. Why groups of 3 are a friendship nightmare - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-groups-3-friendship-nightmare...

    Some warn against "group of three" relationships, where one person is often bound to walk away excluded. But it doesn't have to be that way. Why groups of 3 are a friendship nightmare

  6. Polyamory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyamory

    Specifically, polyamory can take the forms of a triad [a] of three people in an intimate relationship, a poly family of more than three people, one person as the pivot point of a relationship (a "vee"), a couple in a two-person relationship which portrays other relationships on their own, and various other intimate networks of individuals.

  7. Trinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity

    Clarification of the relationships among the three Trinitarian Persons (divine persons, different from the sense of a "human self") advanced in the Magisterial statement promulgated by the Council of Florence (1431–1449), though its formulation precedes the council: "These three persons are one God and not three gods, for the three are one ...

  8. People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People

    A people is any plurality of persons considered as a whole. Used in politics and law , the term "a people" refers to the collective or community of an ethnic group or nation . [ 1 ] The term "the people" refers to the public or common mass of people of a polity . [ 1 ]

  9. Category:People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:People

    This is the master category for all of the many and various categories about individual humans, i.e. people. Articles about individual persons should never be categorized directly in this umbrella category; they belong only in the appropriate subcategories.