She () is athird-person,singularpersonal pronoun (subject case) in Modern English.
The misuse of she for I (also for you and he)is common in literary representations of Highland English.
She is also used instead of itfor things to which feminine gender is conventionally attributed:a ship or boat (especially in colloquial and dialect use),often said of a carriage, a cannon or gun,a tool or utensil of any kind,and occasionally of other things.
She refers to abstractions personified as feminine,and also for the soul, a city, a country, an army, the church, and others.
Rarely and archaically, she referred to an immaterial thing without personification.Also of natural objects considered as feminine, as the moon, or the planets that are named after goddesses;also of a river (now rare), formerly of the sea, a tree, etc.William Caxton in 1483 (The Golden Legende 112 b/2)and Robert Parke in 1588 (tr. Mendoza?s Historie of the great and mightie kingdome of China, 340)used she for the sun,but this may possibly be due to misprint;survival of the Old English grammatical gender can hardly be supposed,but Caxton may have been influenced by the fact that the sun is feminine in Flemish.
She has been used for her,as an object or governed by a preposition,both in literary use (now rare),or vulgarly, as an emphatic objective case.
She is also used attributively, applied to female animals, as in:she-ass, -ape, -bear, -dog, -dragon, -sheep, -wolf, -lion a punning distortion of shilling, -stock, and -stuff the U.S. = cattle.When applied to persons, it is now somewhat contemptuous,as in she-being, -cousin, -dancer, -thief, and others.She-friend meant a female friend, often in bad sense, that is, a mistress;but she-saint, was simply a female saint.Rarely she was also prefixed to masculine nouns in place of the (later frequent) feminine suffix -ess.
It has also been prefixed to nouns with the sense "that is a woman", often in disparaging use but also with intensive force, as she-woman. Now it is somewhat rare:
The origin of the modern pronoun form is controversial. If it is to be derived from the Old English demonstrative pronoun seo, sio, this would presuppose that in some dialects of late Old English the diphthong in this word underwent a change of stress, the older pronunciations [2] and [3] being replaced by [4] and [5].The latter of these variants is represented by the spelling se of the 13th century;and the phonetic development so far is exactly parallel to that of the Old English feminine personal pronoun hío, héo, híe,which in the 13th century was pronounced in some dialects hje:,as is shown by the written forms ho, he.As the combination [6] is acoustically close to [7],and more difficult (according to English habits of articulation) to produce,it is not surprising that sjo: became o:,these being the pronunciations expressed by the written formsscæ (midland, c 1150)and sco, scho (northern, a 1300).
It has been objected to this view thatin Old Northumbrianthe feminine singular of the demonstrativewas not sio, seo,but ðeo, ðiu.Instances of seo and sio are, however, found in the Lindisfarne Gospelsand the glosses to the Durham Ritual and Hymnarium;and the extant remains of the dialect represent a very small portion of the Northumbrian territory.With regard to the substitution of the demonstrative pronoun for the original person pronoun,it may be remarkedthat the phonetic development of various dialectshad in the 12th and 13th centuryrendered the pronouns he (masculine) and heo (feminine)almost or wholly indistinguishable in pronunciation.There was, therefore, where these dialects were spokena strong motive for using the unambiguous feminine demonstrativeinstead of the feminine personal pronoun.Further, the districts in which she or sho first appears in the place of heoare marked by the abundance of Scandinavian elements in the dialect and place-names;and in Old Norse the demonstrative pronoun (of all genders)is often used as a personal pronoun.
It is also noteworthy that in Old Saxon and Old High Germanthe feminine personal pronoun nominative singular was siu(modern German sie, Dutch zij),corresponding to Old English sío(the oblique cases, and the masculine and neuter in the singular,being from the stems hi-, i-);and in Old Frisian se 'she' occurs beside hiu.The conjecture that she represents the Old Norse sjá this(nominative singular masculine and feminine) is untenable:the initial [8] is sufficiently accounted for otherwise,and the vowels do not agree.It is however possible that the change from the falling to the rising diphthongin the development both of hío and síomay be due to Scandinavian influence,as in Old Norse the Germanic eu and iu became rising diphthongs.
Some scholars have maintained that sheand its dialectal variantsdescend directly from the pronunciations hjo: of heo (referred to above);the contention being that [9] might naturally develop into [10].This development has occurred in some Norwegian dialects,and it is illustrated by the proper names Shetland and Shapinshayfrom Old Norse Hjaltland and Hjalpandisøy.There is slight support for this view in the existence of northern dialect formssuch as shoop representing Old English héope.Other views are that [11] was substituted for the un-English sound [12],developed from [13],and that it arose from the sequence -s + j-in such contexts as was hió.The first type (to which the modern literary form belongs)is in origin East Midland,while the other type is originally northern.