I saw Spanish subtitles for this scene once. The first thing Haruka said translated as "If you don't stop bothering me on the way home, I'll have to eat you".
Oh look, the weirdos who'd like to pull the trousers down of a 16 year old teenager just to satisfy their curiosities are all here. Off to jail all of yous lul
Yes, your sex is important because no matter what it's a part of your ownself dear Haruka, so if we want to know you as whole we have to know it. These were simple words you have to tell to Haruka, Usagi. That was all.
She’s non-binary. It can be confusing for her & us. I try to keep an open & not judge. I’m glad a character like her exists. To show everyone how unique she is.
Using they as a singular pronoun has been in practice for hundreds of years. Notable authors such as Jane Austen, Shakespeare, and Charles Dickens used it in that context. Also Shakespeare is credited with creating over 17,000 words that are still in usage to this day. Quite frankly he IS the grammar standard himself. Jane Austen also used the singular they seventy-five times throughout her works.
@@amoravargas9368 That's only when speaking abstractly about a person or persons unknown. It's never used (at least not properly) in reference to one person of a definite sex. As for the pronoun "he", it is generic and universal.