Her

Adjective

 * 1) Belonging to her.
 * This is her book

Pronoun

 * 1) The form of she used after a preposition or as the object of a verb; that woman, that ship, etc.
 * Give it to her (after preposition)
 * He wrote her a letter (indirect object)
 * He treated her for a cold (direct object)
 * 1) * February 1896, Ground-swells, by Jeannette H. Walworth, published in Lippincott's Monthly Magazine; page 183:
 * "Then what became of her?"
 * "Her? Which ‘her’? The park is full of ‘hers’."
 * "The lady with the green feathers in her hat. A big Gainsborough hat. I am quite sure it was Miss Hartuff."

Thesaurus
I, I myself, alter, alter ego, alterum, better self, ego, ethical self, female, female being, he, herself, him, himself, inner man, inner self, it, me, my humble self, myself, number one, oneself, other self, ourselves, self, she, subconscious self, subliminal self, superego, them, themselves, they, you, yours truly, yourself, yourselves

Alternative forms

 * herė

Adjective

 * American Sign Language:
 * Arabic:
 * Egyptian Arabic:
 * Armenian:
 * Old Armenian:
 * Belarusian: яе
 * Bulgarian: неин
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech:
 * Danish: hendes
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto:
 * Finnish: hänen (genitive of hän) + -nsa (with back vowel harmony) / -nsä (with front vowel harmony) (possessive suffix)
 * Note:  In standard Finnish, both the possessive suffix and the genitive of the personal pronoun are compulsory. In colloquial Finnish, usually only hänen is used.
 * French:, ,
 * Note:  In French, the gender of this pronoun agrees with the thing(s) owned, not with the owner.
 * German:, ,
 * Greek: της (tis)
 * Guaraní: i
 * Hebrew: שלה
 * Hindi:, ,
 * Hungarian: -a/-e/-ja/-je
 * Icelandic: accusative hún, dative hún, genitive hún
 * Interlingua: su
 * Italian: il suo m sing, la sua f sing, i suoi, le sue
 * Note:  In Italian, the gender of this pronoun agrees with the thing(s) owned, not with the owner.


 * Japanese:
 * Korean: 그녀의
 * Latin:, suus, suum, sua, sui, suae, eius, illius, huius
 * Lower Sorbian: jeje
 * Macedonian: нејзин
 * Maltese:
 * Norwegian: henne (to her), hennes (her bag), sin (own, generic)
 * Novial: lan, de la
 * Persian:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: seu, dela (lit. "of hers", placed after the noun)
 * Note:  In Portuguese, the gender of this pronoun agrees with the thing(s) owned, not with the owner.
 * Romanian: său, ei (lit. "of hers", placed after the noun)
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: њен
 * Roman: njen
 * Slovak:
 * Slovene:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: hennes, reflexive: sin
 * Telugu: దాని,  ఆమె,   ఆవిడ
 * Thai: ของเขา
 * Tupinambá: i
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian: її
 * Upper Sorbian: jeje
 * Urdu: اس کا,  ان کا
 * Volapük: ofik

Pronoun

 * Arabic:
 * Egyptian Arabic:
 * Armenian:, իրեն
 * Old Armenian:
 * Bulgarian:
 * short form: я (accusative), Ѝ (dative)
 * long form: нея (accusative), на нея (dative)
 * Czech: ní (after preposition), jí (indirect object), ji (direct object)
 * Danish:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: ŝi (after preposition), al ŝi (indirect object), ŝin (direct object)
 * Finnish: hänet (accusative), häntä (partitive)
 * French: (after preposition) elle, (indirect object) lui, (indirect object, emphatic) lui ... à elle, (indirect object with an imperative verb) lui, (direct object) la (becoming l' before a vowel or an mute h), (direct object, emphatic) la ... elle
 * Examples: 
 * After preposition: It is for her - C'est pour elle
 * Indirect object: He tells her his name - Il lui dit son nom
 * Indirect object, emphatic: He gives the book to her - Il lui donne le livre à elle
 * Indirect object with an imperative verb: Give it to her - Donnez-le-lui
 * Direct object: He hates her - Il la déteste
 * Direct object (followed by a vowel): He loves her - Il l'aime
 * Direct object, emphatic: He loves her - Il l'aime, elle
 * German: sie (accusative), ihr (dative)
 * Greenlandic: una
 * Guaraní: i
 * Hindi: इस, उस
 * Hungarian: őt (accusative), neki (dative)


 * Ido: el, elu
 * Interlingua: la (direct/indirect object); illa (after preposition)
 * Italian: (after preposition) lei, (indirect object) le, (indirect object, emphatic) a lei, (indirect object with an imperative verb) le (attached to the end of the verb and becoming glie- when used along with a direct object; the l is doubled with some verbs), (direct object) la (becoming l' before a vowel), (direct object, emphatic) lei
 * Examples: 
 * After preposition: It is for her - É per lei
 * Indirect object: Giovanni tells her his name - Giovanni le dice il suo nome
 * Indirect object, emphatic: Giovanni gives the book to her - Giovanni dà il libro a lei
 * Indirect object with an imperative verb, used without a direct object: Write to her - Scrivile; Tell her - Dille
 * Indirect object with an imperative verb, used with a direct object: Send it to her - Spedisciglielo; Give it to her - Daglielo
 * Direct object: Giovanni wants her - Giovanni la vuole
 * Direct object (before a vowel): Giovanni hates her - Giovanni l'odia
 * Direct object, emphatic: Giovanni wants her - Giovanni vuole lei
 * Latin: eam,  ei,  eam,  ei,  ea,  eam,  ea,  ei,  illi,  illam,  illa,  hanc,  huic,  hac
 * Novial: la
 * Polish: jej, ją, nią, niej
 * Russian:,  ,  (see  - she for the complete declension)
 * Spanish: a ella, le
 * Swedish:
 * Telugu: దాన్ని,  ఆమెని,   ఆవిణ్ణి
 * Tupinambá: i

Anagrams

 * EHR

Etymology
From hér.

Adverb

 * 1) here

Related terms

 * herefter
 * herfra
 * herhen
 * hermed
 * herved

Noun
her


 * 1) here

Usage notes
Not used in daily life, "hier" is rather used. "her" is only used in expressions like the ones below.

Derived terms

 * her en der: here and there, hither and thither (her en der verspreid: scattered all over the place)
 * van hot naar her: from pillar to post, here, there and everywhere

Etymology
From hér.

Adverb

 * 1) here

Etymology
hera:.

Adverb

 * 1) hither, to this place, to here, to me/us
 * 2) ago

Antonyms

 * hin

Derived terms

 * hierher
 * herüber
 * herbei
 * heraus

Etymology
From herr:.

Noun

 * 1) army, military

Etymology
From.

Adverb

 * 1) every, each
 * 2) anyone
 * 3) anyway

Etymology
From hieër

Noun
her m


 * 1) vocative of hieër
 * 2) mister!
 * 3) Lord!

Etymology
From hér:.

Adverb

 * 1) here
 * Det er fint å vera her.
 * It's nice to be here.

Alternative forms

 * hær (main form)

Etymology
From herr:.

Noun

 * 1) army
 * Landet hadde den største heren i området.
 * The country had the largest army in the area.
 * 1) a large/huge amount, a flock
 * Det kom ein heil her av grashopper.
 * A huge amount of grashoppers came.

Etymology 1
From, apparently from the stem *hi- ‘this’; the exact formation is unclear. Cognate with Old Saxon hēr, Old High German hiar, Old Norse hér, Gothic 𐌷𐌴𐍂.

Adverb

 * 1) here

Descendants

 * English: here

Etymology 2
From. Cognate with Old Saxon hār (Dutch haar), Old High German hār (German Haar), Old Norse hár (Swedish hår).

Noun

 * 1) hair

Descendants

 * English: hair

Etymology
, whence also Old English hār, Old Norse hárr.

Adjective

 * 1) old

Etymology
From

Adverb

 * 1) every