He (IPAEng: hiː) is a third-person, singular personal pronoun (subject case) in Modern English.
Welcome to CWAnswers
CWAnswers is your guide to the sprawling world wide web. The directory aims to provide a useful guide made by users. You can share your knowledge as well - simply sign up and edit your first entry. For questions just contact the team at support - at - cwanswers.com.
Weblinks for He
Top 10 for He
Things about He you find nowhere else.
Select content modules
Darren He's Blog
This is Darren He's blog. Come here to read my thoughts about Harvard, college, technology, websites, dieting, exercise, cycling, and more!darrenhe.com/blog/The Trump Blog
Ideas and opinions from Donald Trump and a host of experts associated with Trump University.donaldtrump.trumpuniversity.com/Moby's Journal
Official blog from techno music artist Moby's website.www.moby.com/journalJoho the Blog " Can the White House blog?
Come up with an informative-but-bland blog that offends no one? ... For an official White House blog, I would think it'd have to be pretty ... "Will he blog? ...www.hyperorg.com/blogger/2008/11/10/can-the-white-house-blog...NO QUARTER
NoQuarterUSA was nominated as Best Political Blog of 2008.[1] He has worked as a ... Larry Johnson's blog, NoQuarterUSA, became a rally point for Clinton supporters ...noquarterusa.net/blogHe (IPAEng: hiː) is a third-person, singular personal pronoun (subject case) in Modern English.
People
He can be used as a substitution of a male's name.
Animals
"He" and "she" are often used to refer to domesticated animals and sometimes nondomesticated animals of the respective gender.
Generic
Quote: Albert Ludwigs Universität]], 2003. Page 41. However, many people disagree with this assertion and instead recognize he and him as representative of forced male domination and female subordination.
Other
The pronoun He, with a universally capitalized H is often used to refer to the Christian God.
Gender
main: Gender in English The gender system in Modern English is generally natural, semantic and logical, however it is most similar to languages whose gender systems primarily distinguish between the animate and inanimate, and between the personal and impersonal. In the table RP stands for relative pronoun and PP for personal pronoun.
Indo-European
The reconstructed Indo-European language provides a demonstrative pronoun ko.
Germanic
English is a development of the West Germanic language family.
Old English
Speakers of Old English (OE) considered each noun to have a grammatical gender — masculine, feminine or neuter. Pronouns were generally (but not always) selected to have the same grammatical gender as the noun they referred to. For example, dæg (IPA2: dæj, day) was masculine, so a masculine pronoun was used when referring to a day or days. The personal pronoun for a singular masculine subject was written he, just like Present-Day English (PrDE). However, OE he was probably pronounced like PrDE hay (IPA2: he:). The vowel in hay is normally longer in duration than in the exlamation Hey! (IPA2: he). Because the vowel sound of OE he was long in duration, scholars (and OE dictionaries) now write it as hē.
Middle English
There was one change to the inflection of the masculine pronoun in Middle English. The OE dative form him replaced the OE accusative hine (IPA2: hine). This meant that, in Middle English, there was no distinction between masculine and impersonal, except in the subject case of the third-person singular, until it from hit replaced him in the object case of the impersonal. Some people believe "there was rather an extended period of time in the history of the English language when the choice of a supposedly masculine personal pronoun (him) said nothing about the gender or sex of the referent." However, many people disagree with this assertion and instead recognize he and him as representative of forced male domination and female subordination.
See also
- Generic antecedents
- Gender-specific pronoun
- English personal pronouns



























