… and yet he still refers to himself in the singular.
Not "Eds" or "Ed and Ed".
And that’s not very logical at all. He could say either "I" or "We" as suits his preference, even switch between the two whenever it became more relevant ("I walked down to the lake" "We spent the afternoon talking about butterflies" etc.)
The issue there isn’t the number of heads; it’s the low intelligence and toddler-level language skills.
There’s a logical reason why he can’t refer to himself in the first person. He’s actually two persons.
… and yet he still refers to himself in the singular.
Not "Eds" or "Ed and Ed".
And that’s not very logical at all. He could say either "I" or "We" as suits his preference, even switch between the two whenever it became more relevant ("I walked down to the lake" "We spent the afternoon talking about butterflies" etc.)
The issue there isn’t the number of heads; it’s the low intelligence and toddler-level language skills.