She (pronoun)




She is the feminine third-person, singular personal pronoun in Modern English. In 1999, the American Dialect Society chose she as the word of the past millennium.

Origin

She is probably a development of the Old English feminine demonstrative pronoun sēo.
Although she was a lexical alteration of an Old English pronoun, its grammatical place in Middle English was not determined by its lexical predecessor's grammatical place in Old English. According to Dennis Baron's Grammar and Gender:
In 1789, William H. Marshall records the existence of a dialectal English epicene pronoun, singular "ou": "'Ou will' expresses either he will, she will, or it will." Marshall traces "ou" to Middle English epicene "a", used by the 14th century English writer John of Trevisa, and both the OED and Wright's English Dialect Dictionary confirm the use of "a" for he, she, it, they, and even I. This "a" is a reduced form of the Anglo-Saxon he = "he" and heo = "she". By the 12th and 13th centuries, these had often weakened to a point where, according to the OED, they were "almost or wholly indistinguishable in pronunciation." The modern feminine pronoun she, which first appears in the mid twelfth century, seems to have been drafted at least partly to reduce the increasing ambiguity of the pronoun system...

Thus in Middle English the new feminine pronoun she established itself to satisfy a linguistic need.

Usage

When by convention feminine gender is attributed to things, she is used instead of it
to denote it.
When natural realities and social realities are personified as feminine, she denotes them as well.
She is also used attributively with female animals, as in she-ass, -ape, -bear, -dragon, -wolf, -lion. In early modern English she was occasionally prefixed to masculine nouns in place of the feminine suffix -ess.
Sometimes she is prefixed to nouns to attribute feminine character to or emphasize or intensify the feminine attributes of a thing:
Instead of her, she has been used as an object or after a preposition
both in literary use or vulgarly as an emphatic oblique case.
The use of she for I
is common in literary representations of Highland English.
"He" and "she" are sometimes used colloquially as adjectives or nouns to distinguish gender, e.g.