she
pron.pron. the word you use to talk about a female person or animal that you have already mentioned.
pron. the third-person singular feminine nominative pronoun. Used as the subject of a verb to refer to a female person, animal, or occasionally a personified object.
She is my best friend.
The doctor said she would call back with the test results later this afternoon.
While the author remains anonymous, many critics believe she drew heavily from her own childhood experiences when writing the protagonist's early chapters.
Inherited from Middle English sche, scho, hyo, ȝho (“she”), whence also Yorkshire dialectal shoo (“she”), Scots she, sho (“she”). Probably from Old English hēo (whence dialectal English hoo), with an irregular change in stress from hēo to heō /hjoː/, then a development from /hj-/ to /ç/ to /ʃ-/, similar to the derivation of Shetland from Old Norse Hjaltland. In this case, she is from Proto-West Germanic hiju, from Proto-Germanic hijō f (“this, this one”), from Proto-Indo-European ḱe-, ḱey- (“this, here”), and is cognate with Saterland Frisian jo, ju, West Frisian hja, North Frisian jü, Danish hun, Swedish hon; more at he. A derivation from Old English sēo (“that one”, occasionally “she”) is also possible, though less likely. In that case, sēo would have undergone a change in stress from sēo to seō /sjoː/, then a change from /sj-/ to /ʃ-/, similar to the derivation of sure from Old French seur. It would then be cognate to Dutch zij and German sie. Neither etymology would be expected to yield the modern vocalism in /iː/ (the expected form would be shoo, which is in fact found dialectally). It may be due to influence from he, but both hēo and sēo also have rare variants (hīe and sīe) that may give modern English /iː/.
Functions as the subject of a sentence or clause; the corresponding object form is 'her'.
Her is a doctor.She is a doctor.Learners sometimes confuse the subject pronoun 'she' with the object pronoun 'her'.