She

Pronoun

 * 1)  A female person or animal.
 * , II.ix:
 * Goodly she entertaind those noble knights, / And brought them vp into her castle hall [...].
 * I asked Mary, but she said that she didn't know.
 * 1)  A ship or country.
 * 2)  Machinery such as cars and steam engines.
 * She is a beautiful boat, isn't she?
 * 1)  he/she. used arbitrarily with he for an indefinite person in order to be gender-neutral.
 * 2) * Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Flow, 1990:
 * Optimal experience is thus something that we make happen. For a child, it could be placing with trembling fingers the last block on a tower she has built, higher than any she has built so far; for a swimmer, it could be trying to beat his own record; for a violinist, mastering an intricate musical passage.

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

Etymology
From sche:, hye:, from earlier scho:, hyo:, ȝho:, a phonetic development of  heo:, hio:, from, from. Cognate with dialectal hoo:,  scho:, shu:,  hja:,  jü:,  hun:,  hon:. More at.

Despite the similarity in appearance, the feminine demonstrative seo: is probably not the source of  forms in sch-. Rather, the sch- developed out of a change in stress upon hío resulting in hió, spelt undefined: (undefined: = undefined:, compare wh = hw, lh = hl, etc.), and the h was palatalised into the sh sound. Similar alteration can be seen the name Shetland, from Hjaltland; undefined: is the immediate parent form of  scho and sche.

Translations

 * Albanian:
 * Arabic:
 * Egyptian: (híyya)
 * Aramaic:
 * Syriac: ܗܝ (hī)
 * Hebrew: הי (hī)
 * Armenian:
 * Belarusian:
 * Bengali: ,
 * Bulgarian:
 * Burmese: ,
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese: (formal in all dialects) 她
 * Cantonese: (formal),  (vernacular)
 * Teochew: i1 (伊) (vernacular), 她 (formal, female only)
 * Mandarin:
 * Min Nan: 伊 (i)
 * Cree: wiya (both male and female)
 * Croatian:
 * Czech:
 * Danish:
 * Dutch:
 * Dyirbal: (no third-person pronoun)
 * Egyptian: sy *síy
 * Erzya:
 * Esperanto:
 * Estonian: (both male and female)
 * Ewe: eya (both male and female)
 * Faroese:
 * Fijian: koya (both male and female)
 * Finnish: (both male and female)
 * French:
 * Old French:
 * Galician: ela
 * Georgian: (both male and female)
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Greenlandic: una
 * Guaraní: ahẽ (both male and female)
 * Hausa: (independent form) ’ítá
 * Hawaiian: ia (both male and female)
 * Hebrew:
 * Hindi:  (read: ve),   (read: ye)
 * Hopi:
 * Hungarian: (both male and female)
 * Icelandic:
 * Ido: el, elu
 * Indonesian: /  (both male and female)
 * Interlingua: illa
 * Irish: sí conjunctive, í disjunctive
 * Italian: ,


 * Japanese:, ,  ,
 * Korean:
 * !Kung: (both male and female)
 * Latgalian: ,
 * Latin:, ,
 * Latvian: viņa
 * Lithuanian:
 * Maltese:
 * Moksha:
 * Mongolian:
 * Northern Sami:
 * Norwegian:
 * Novial: la
 * Ojibwe: (both male and female)
 * Old English: ,
 * Old Irish:
 * Old Provençal:
 * Persian: (both male and female)
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Quechua: pay (both male and female)
 * Romanian: ,
 * Russian:
 * Scottish Gaelic: i nonemphatic, ise emphatic
 * Serbian:
 * Cyrillic:
 * Roman: ona
 * Sicilian: idda
 * Sinhalese:
 * Slovak:
 * Slovene:
 * Spanish:
 * Swahili: yeye (both male and female)
 * Swedish:
 * Tagalog: niya (ng form), kaniya (sa form), siya (unmarked form) (all both male and female)
 * Taos: ą́wąną
 * Telugu: ఆమె (aame)
 * Thai:
 * Tupinambá: a'e (both male and female)
 * Turkish: (both male and female)
 * Ugaritic:
 * Ukrainian:
 * Urdu: وہ, يہ
 * Vietnamese: chị ấy,  cô ấy,  bà ấy,  nó
 * Volapük:
 * Welsh:
 * West Frisian: ,
 * !Xóõ:, (emphatic) , , (emphatic)
 * Yiddish: זי
 * Yoruba: ó, á (both male and female)
 * Zazaki:


 * Use the translation of he, she (person) or it according to the gender of the object in the target language.


 * Finnish:

Anagrams

 * esh, he's, HSE

Pinyin syllable
she