There’s only one acceptable time to use the royal “we” (2024)

People are often advised to use “I” statements when dealing with conflict at work. For example, “I felt anxious when you committed corporate espionage and gave my big photo spread to a rival magazine.”

That is a sentence that Jenna, the protagonist of the 2004 romantic comedy 13 Going on 30, could say to workplace rival Lucy. And it’s probably applicable in a range of other contexts, too.

Here is another piece of pronoun advice that is just as valuable and yet lesser-known, perhaps because I just invented it. (I statement!) It’s simple: There’s only one circ*mstance under which a boss should use the pronoun “we” when talking to an employee.*

Why “we” does not amuse

To understand the logic behind this rule, it may be helpful to review a brief history of how much people hate the royal we. According to The New Yorker writer and copy editor Mary Norris, “The English royal we, or pluralis majestatis, dates to the late twelfth century, around the time of Henry II and his successor Richard I, and meant ‘God and I,’ invoking the divine right of kings.” Unsurprisingly, given that monarchs historically have been both poorly behaved and generally annoying, the royal we came to signify oblivious self-importance, as per the apocryphal tale of Queen Victoria declaring “We are not amused” in response to a bawdy joke.

By the 19th century, those who made the mistake of tossing around the royal we were ripe targets for mockery. The New York Times reports that in late 1877, US senator Roscoe Conkling poked fun at then-president Rutherford B. Hayes’s usage: “Yes, I have noticed there are three classes of people who always say ‘we’ instead of ‘I.’ They are emperors, editors and men with a tapeworm.” Some 100 years and change later, British prime minister Margaret Thatcher was widely ridiculed for her grandiose pronouncement, “We have become a grandmother.”

A close relative of the royal we is the so-called “editorial we” found in many newspapers’ opinion pages. This tic is equally alienating, as Ben Zimmer writes for the Times: “Nameless authors of editorials may find the pronoun we handy for representing the voice of collective wisdom, but their word choice opens them up to charges of gutlessness and self-importance.”

The royal and editorial “we” both sound pompous because the individual speaker or writer seem to be asserting that their opinion has been endorsed by the multitudes, when in fact anyone can see that they are standing all by themselves, gesturing at the empty air. The use of the inclusive “we” in speeches or criticism—say, “We feel joy when Cardi B raps”—is also risky territory, since it presumes common ground where there may be none. (What if the reader is a Nicki Minaj loyalist?) As Jeremy Gordon notes in Pacific Standard, “In hiding the individual author, a consensus opinion is born. No one person thinks this thing; we do.”

This is us

In the modern office setting, there are two main misuses of the word “we.” The first case occurs when a self-congratulatory manager attempts to take credit for work they did not, in fact, do. “We really nailed that presentation,” a boss might declare at an all-hands meeting, referring to the project that he never touched but which cost his team two weeks of unpaid overtime.

It’s a rhetorical sleight-of-hand that’s difficult to call out. Part of the reason “we” has become so popular as a fall-back pronoun in contemporary writing, as Gordon notes, is that it relieves the speaker of any need to take personal responsibility for their assertion. After all, if sports fans are allowed to cheer “We won” after their home teams emerge victorious, who’s to say whether the manager in question was truly trying to get a piece of unearned glory—or simply using a figure of speech?

Equally ill-advised is the use of inclusive “we” when a manager is actually making a request that someone else will have to execute. “Why don’t we turn that around by EOD,” a boss might say to an underling while handing off a last-minute task and proceeding to take a two-hour lunch. In both instances, the manager is nominally including themselves in the efforts of others while contributing nothing in practice.

There is, however, at least one circ*mstance in which the collective “we” is not just appropriate but downright welcome: When the going gets rough. “We could have done a better job on that report” is an admission that both softens the blow of negative feedback for the person who is being addressed and acknowledges the manager’s responsibility as supervisor. “We need an extension on that deadline,” a manager might say to her supervisor, preferring to avoid singling out the direct report who’s fallen behind.

When we are the champions

At first glance, this guidance might seem to contradict research on how powerful people use pronouns. One 2013 study, published in the Journal of Language and Social Psychology, found that people with higher status tend to use “we” more often in both writing and speech, while lower-ranking people are more apt to use first-person pronouns.

Here’s the key: The researchers suggested that this pattern could be attributed to the fact that people of higher status tend to demonstrate a greater focus on others than their lower-status peers. In other words, the higher-status people in the study were using “we” in a pro-social way—putting attention on the group rather than themselves. It’s in that same spirit that Jeff Bezos has historically used the collective “we” while boasting of Amazon’s successes in his letters to shareholders.

So all right, there are actually two circ*mstances* under which higher-ups can use the word “we.” It’s when bosses use “we” to gloss over the hard work of the people they manage that we all run into trouble.

There’s only one acceptable time to use the royal “we” (2024)

FAQs

Can I use the royal we? ›

The royal we, majestic plural (pluralis majestatis), or royal plural is the use of a plural pronoun (or corresponding plural-inflected verb forms) used by a single person who is a monarch or holds a high office to refer to themselves. A more general term for the use of a we, us, or our to refer to oneself is nosism.

Is the royal we grammatically correct? ›

As others have mentioned, monarchs when they speak/write formally (British royalty perhaps since this is English), use the term "we" instead of "I" because they (presumably) speak for the nation or the court. It's plural, not third person. 3rd person would be he or she.

Why do some people use the royal we? ›

The English royal we, or pluralis majestatis, dates to the late twelfth century, around the time of Henry II and his successor Richard I, and meant “God and I,” invoking the divine right of kings. It has since come to be understood that a monarch using the royal we is speaking for the state.

What is the royal we slang? ›

[singular] ​the use of 'we' instead of 'I' by a single person, as used traditionally by kings and queens in the past. Culture. We are not amused.” a famous remark made by Queen Victoria.

Does Charles use the royal we? ›

Only the monarch uses the royal we. All other pronouns remain as they usually are. “He is King Charles III now, yet I remember him as just another student at Cambridge.”

Why does the Quran use royal we? ›

Muhammad is using the Royal “We”, along with “Us” and “Our”, to produce the impression of grandeur and royalty appropriate for royalty.

Is the royal we condescending? ›

So most uses of the first person plural to refer the singular person speaking can be described as a 'royal we' in a pejorative sense of arrogant or 'stuck-up'.

Why do royals say one instead of I? ›

Monarchs, people of higher classes, and particularly the late Queen Elizabeth II during her reign, are often depicted as using one as a first-person pronoun. This was frequently used as a caricature by the press when they referred to the Queen or other senior members of the Royal Family.

Is it grammatically correct to say we? ›

The pronoun is the subject of the verb "walk" so you need to use the subject pronoun "we." (incorrect) Us walk to school every day. (correct) We walk to school every day. (correct) We children walk to school every day.

How do Americans greet British royalty? ›

Address royalty by the proper terms.

So make sure you address royalty appropriately: when greeting a queen or king, address them as “Your Majesty.” "Your Royal Highness" is for non-king or queen royals. You only need to use "Your Majesty" and "Your Royal Highness" when addressing a royal for the first time.

Should Americans curtsy to royalty? ›

If an American meets a royal, they technically do not have to curtsy or bow because that it's not a custom, Meier explains. Instead, they could choose to simply shake hands to show respect. "That being said, many Americans still choose to observe a traditional British greeting of a bow or curtsy," she says.

Can you use we as a singular? ›

language note: We is the first person plural pronoun. We is used as the subject of a verb. A speaker or writer uses we to refer both to himself or herself and to one or more other people as a group. You can use we before a noun to make it clear which group of people you are referring to.

How do Royals say hello? ›

Bowing and curtsying are the traditional greetings, and perhaps a handshake if they offer one.

What is meant by the royal you? ›

The royal you is me making up a phrase to mean "I'm using the word you to mean the reader, not you the person I am responding to" I thought it was pretty obvious but yea you got me. Good point, well made.

Why do people say we instead of you? ›

Some people feel that “we” communicates trust or leverages a more friendly manner; it's neither bossing nor accusatory.

Should the royal we be capitalized? ›

I personally would treat it the same as the singular form, so anywhere you replace "I" with "We" to get the royal "We," then I would capitalize it since "I" is always capitalized, even in the middle of sentences.

Do you need permission to use the word royal? ›

If you want to include the word 'Royal' in the name of your company or brand logo you will need to contact the Constitutional Settlements Unit at the Cabinet Office which has the ultimate sanction over the use of Royal Crests on government and legislative documents and use of the word 'Royal' in place names such as ...

Why do people use we instead of I? ›

lower status participants in interactions, particularly those in an employment context, psychologist James Pennebaker and his colleagues found that those who took on leadership roles used fewer first-person singular words (I, me, my) and more plural words (we, our, they), while those in subordinate roles used I-words ...

What is the royal we in academic writing? ›

The royal 'we' – that is, the use of 'we' instead of 'I' by a single author – is outdated and pompous. 'We' should only be used by multiple authors to refer to themselves, or by a single author to refer to themselves and their imagined reader.

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