Depends heavily on the languages because it’s not like there’s just English and then all other languages.
I think it’s Swedish that has a universal third person pronoun, so it’s already implemented there. Germanic languages are probably similar to English in that the most familiar option is to use singular “they”. Spanish uses “elle”/“su” as gender-neutral they/their. Korean doesn’t distinguish gender in third person pronouns at all, and neither does spoken Chinese (Mandarin at least, but probably most or all dialects).
Depends heavily on the languages because it’s not like there’s just English and then all other languages.
I think it’s Swedish that has a universal third person pronoun, so it’s already implemented there. Germanic languages are probably similar to English in that the most familiar option is to use singular “they”. Spanish uses “elle”/“su” as gender-neutral they/their. Korean doesn’t distinguish gender in third person pronouns at all, and neither does spoken Chinese (Mandarin at least, but probably most or all dialects).
Thanks