Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The fifth letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The fifth letter () of the Hebrew alphabet, corresponding to the English h. Its numerical value is 5.
- noun The chemical symbol of helium.
- A sound made in calling, laughing, etc.: as, He! he! an archers' word of call.
- A personal pronoun of the third person, the form he being nomiuative singular masculine.
- A. Masc. sing.
- Nom. he. [Colloq. or dial. also
e , also ha, a (seea ), ⟨ ME. he, heo, ha, ho, a, e, ⟨ AS. hē = OS. he, hi, hie = OFries. hi, he = MLG. he, LG. he, hei = Dutch hij = Goth. *his (= Icel. hann = Sw. Dan. han): see further in etym. above.] - Poss. (gen.) his (hiz). [Colloq. or dial. also
is , ⟨ ME. his, hys, is, ys, ⟨ AS. his = OFries. his(= OS., etc., is, from another root: see etym. above).] Of him: now always merely possessive, and preceding the noun, but originally also nsed objectively with certain verbs. By a confusion of the genitive suffix -es, -is with this possessive form of the personal pronoun, the suffix came in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to be often written separately as his: as, Artaxerxes his crown, etc. For this use, see under his. For the neuter his, see C . - Obj. (dat.) him. (Colloq. or dial. also
im , ⟨ ME. him, hym, ⟨ AS. him, hym = OFries. him = Dutch hem (= MLG. im, em, LG. em = OHG. imo, MHG. ime, im, German ihm = Goth. imma, from another root: see etym. above).] This form, originally only dative, is also used as accusative, having displaced the original form for the accusative. See . For the neuter him, see C . - Conversely, him is often used, colloquially, for he in the predicate: as, it is him; like “it is me” for “it is I.” See
I .] Obj. (acc.) him. [A substitution of the dative form him, or an accom. to him of the earlier form, ME. hin, hine, ⟨ AS. hine = OFries. hini, hine (also him, hem)(cf. OS. ina = OHG. ina, MHG. ine, German in, German ihn = Goth. ina, from another root: see etym. above).] See above. - B. Fem. sing.
- Nom. he, ho, hoo (now only dialectal, the form she, of different origin, being used in literary English). [English dial. also e, a; ⟨ ME. he, hi, hie, heo, ha, hoe, ho, hue, a (also zeo, zho, zoe, ze, these forms affording a transition to the use of scheo, scho, sche, she, whence mod. E. she, q. v.), ⟨ AS. heó, hió, hié, hī = OFries, hio, hiu (for other Teut. forms, see
she ).] She. - Poss. (gen.) heraldry [English dial. also
er ; ⟨ ME. her, hir, here, hire, hur, hure, ir, ⟨ AS. hire, hyre = OFries. hiri = Dutch harer (cf. MLG. er, ir, LG. er = OHG. ira, iro, MHG. ire, German ihr = Goth. izōs, from another root: see etym. above).] - Obj. (dat.) heraldry [English dial. also
er ; ⟨ ME. her, hir, hyr, here, hire, hure, hur, ⟨ AS. hire, hyre = OFries. hiri = Dutch haar (cf. OS. iru = MLG. er, ir, LG. er = OHG. iru, MHG. ire, ir, German ihr = Goth. iza, from another root: see etym. above).] - Obj. (acc.) heraldry [English dial. also
er ; ⟨ ME. her, hir, hyr, substituted (as also the masc. dat. for acc.) for the orig. acc., ME. heo, hi (also hise, his, is), ⟨ AS. hie, hi = OFries. hia (for other Teut. forms, seeshe ).] - C. Neut. sing.
- Nom. it. [English dial. also
hit (rather as a corrupt aspiration of the prevalent it than a survival of the orig. form hit), early mod. E. alsoyt , ⟨ ME. it, yt, et, hit, hyt, ⟨ AS. hit, hyt = OFries. hit = Dutch het (cf. OS. it = MLG. it, et, LG. et = OHG. iz, ez, MHG. ez, German es = Goth. ita = Latin id, etc., from another root: see etym. above).] - Poss. its, formerly
his . [The poss. form its is first recorded in print in 1598. It is formed fromit by the addition of the common possessive (genitive) suffix -s, of nouns, the nom. and obj. form it being also used for a time in the possessive without a suffix. The substitution arose when the orig. neut. poss. his, which had the same form as the masc. poss. his, began to be regarded as masc. only, thus giving it, when used properly as neut., the appearance of a personification. Earlier mod. E. his, hys, ⟨ ME. his, hys, ⟨ AS. his, in form like the masc. his: see A .] - Obj. (dat.) it. [This is a substitution for the orig. him, the nom. and acc. it being so frequent (by reason of the numerous idiomatic uses of the word) that the dative gave way to the accusative, while in the masc. and fem. the accusative gave way to the dative. Early mod. E. him, ⟨ ME. him, hym, ⟨ AS. him, etc., in forms like the masc.: see A .]
- Obj. (acc.) it. [⟨ ME. it, hit, et, ⟨ AS. hit, etc., in forms like the nom. See above.]
- D. Masc., fem., and neut. pl. [Obsolete or colloquial (see , below), the form they, of different origin, being used in literary English.] Nom. he, hi. [ME. he, heo, hio, hi, hie, ha, hue, etc., ⟨ AS. hī, hīe, hig, heó, hió = OFries. hia (in other Teut. forms from a different root, represented by she).] They: displaced in modern English by they (which see).
- Poss. (gen.) her, here. [Now only dial.; ⟨ ME. here, hire, hure, huere, hare, hore, heore, ⟨ AS. hira, hyra, heora = OFries. hiara.] Their: displaced in modern English by their (which see, under
they ). - Obj. (dat.) hem, em, 'em. [Common in early mod. E., in which it came to be regarded as a contr. of the equiv. them, and was therefore in the 17th century often printed 'hem, 'em; in present use only colloq., written 'em (see
'em ); ⟨ ME, hem, ham, hom, heom, hemen, ⟨ AS. him, heom = OFries. hiam, him, himmen, etc. (cf. Goth. im, from another root: see etym. above).] Them. Seethey . - Obj. (acc.) hem, em, 'em. [⟨ ME. hem, hom, etc.; a substitution for the orig. he, hi, etc. (same form as the nom.), the dative having displaced the accusative here as in the singular (see A ). See above.] Them. See
they . - For the reflexive and emphatic form of
he , seehimself . - This one; that one.
- noun A male person; a man: correlative to she, a woman.
- noun A male animal; a beast, bird, or fish of the male sex: correlative to she, a female animal.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- (Chem.) The chemical symbol for
helium . - pronoun The man or male being (or object personified to which the masculine gender is assigned), previously designated; a pronoun of the masculine gender, usually referring to a specified subject already indicated.
- pronoun Any one; the man or person; -- used indefinitely, and usually followed by a relative pronoun.
- pronoun Man; a male; any male person; -- in this sense used substantively.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- pronoun personal Refers to a
male person or animal already known or implied. - pronoun personal Refers to a person whose gender is unknown.
- pronoun personal Refers to an animal whose gender is unknown.
- noun The game of
tag , orit , in which the player attempting to catch the others is called "he". - noun The name of the fifth letter of many
Semitic alphabets (Phoenician ,Aramaic ,Hebrew ,Syriac ,Arabic and others).
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a very light colorless element that is one of the six inert gasses; the most difficult gas to liquefy; occurs in economically extractable amounts in certain natural gases (as those found in Texas and Kansas)
- noun the 5th letter of the Hebrew alphabet
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Oh, no, said he, he [Lincoln] wont enter into the Slave States to disturb the institution of slavery, he is too prudent a man to do such a thing as that; he only means that he will go on to the line between the Free and Slave States, and shoot over at them.
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The only magazine he subscribed to, he said, wasScientific American, a publication that I had previously scorned as the trade journal of pre-med students and Nobel Prize winners.
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In order to get the boxes we'd brought emptied so we could remove them, I went on and put away the kitchen stuff, but told him he was certainly free to move it around where *he* wanted it he was carrying more stuff up, while I did that as a rest for myself.
From Twitter 05-22-2010 e_moon60 2010
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As for doing the same thing with the Democrats – sounds to me like he's decided to do all on his own…and when he succeeds..he won't owe anyone any markers!
Shouldn’t he be busy recalibrating and consulting with Americans? - Beyond The Commons - Macleans.ca 2010
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Because of course what this man *really* means is that he only wants stories that *he* can relate to.
Wait, what did you say? girliejones 2010
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Because of course what this man *really* means is that he only wants stories that *he* can relate to.
Wait, what did you say? girliejones 2010
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Christopher_M it makes sense he is a driving/racing/car hobbyist..he loves cars and racing almost as much as Lucas..
Rumor Mill: Is Patrick Stewart in Mad Max: Fury Road? (Nope!) | /Film 2010
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What he couldn't tell the Captain, or any of his crew, was something that was so spleen bustingly obvious it gave him physical pain when he realized none of them knew why he had taken so long.
The Plunderer Jason Spittel 2010
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Many will say he could not afford insurance, funny…..he had is chair he sat in at Hooters with his name on it…
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Obama is seen as truly authentic so it should be a choice that he would, on his own, make because * he* thinks it's the best person.
Hillary-Backer Ed Rendell Suggests Obama Ask Hillary To Be Veep 2009
oroboros commented on the word he
He. Chemical element symbol for Helium.
December 16, 2007
asativum commented on the word he
He who?
June 21, 2008
bilby commented on the word he
He who shall not be named.
June 21, 2008
she commented on the word he
Nullibiquitous is He (Is there a character minimum for usernames here? I wonder if He's even Possible.)
July 10, 2008
johnmperry commented on the word he
Another bizarre definition. Isn't something missing? viz. third person singular nominative pronoun.
July 16, 2008
vanishedone commented on the word he
Supposedly WeirdNet just doesn't do pronouns. Maybe they're too common for its notice.
July 16, 2008