Pluralis majestatis
From Free net encyclopedia
Pluralis majestatis ("majestic plural") is the plural pronoun where it is used to refer to one person alone. This is also known as the "royal we" or the "Victorian we" because it has usually been restricted to august personages such as monarchs, bishops, Popes, and university rectors. The idea behind the pluralis majestatis is that a monarch or other high official always speaks for his or her people.
Examples of purported instances:
- We are not amused. Queen Victoria (in at least one account of this quotation, though, she was not speaking for herself alone, but for the ladies of the court.)
- We are a grandmother. Margaret Thatcher announcing the birth of Mark Thatcher's son Michael in 1990.
It is to be distinguished from pluralis modestiae, also pluralis auctoris (inclusion of readers or listeners). For instance:
- Let's calculate! Leibniz
- We are thus led also to a definition of "time" in physics. Albert Einstein
It was said that United States Navy Admiral Hyman G. Rickover told a subordinate that used the royal we: "Three groups are permitted that usage: pregnant women, royalty, and schizophrenics. Which one are you?"; similarly, Mark Twain extended this privilege to "people with tapeworms".
See also
- We
- T-V distinction
- Elohim, a plural name of the Hebrew deity Yahweh.
- The King of All Cosmos in Katamari Damacy talks in it.de:Pluralis Majestatis
nl:Pluralis majestatis pl:Pluralis majestatis sv:Pluralis majestatis