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he
1[ hee; unstressed ee ]
pronoun
- the male person or animal being discussed or last mentioned; that male.
- anyone (without reference to gender); that person:
He who hesitates is lost.
noun
- any male person or animal; a man:
hes and shes.
adjective
- male (usually used in combination):
a he-goat.
he
2[ hey ]
noun
- the fifth letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
- any of the sounds represented by this letter.
He
3- helium.
HE
4- high explosive.
H.E.
5abbreviation for
- high explosive. Also HE
- His Eminence.
- His Excellency; Her Excellency.
HE
1abbreviation for
- high explosive
- His Eminence
- His ( or Her) Excellency
He
2the chemical symbol for
- helium
he
3/ i藧; hi藧 /
pronoun
- refers to a male person or animal
he's a fine stallion
he looks interesting
- refers to an indefinite antecedent such as one, whoever, or anybody
everybody can do as he likes in this country
- refers to a person or animal of unknown or unspecified sex
a member of the party may vote as he sees fit
he
4/ he; he瑟 /
noun
- the fifth letter of the Hebrew alphabet (讛), transliterated as h
he
5/ hi藧; he瑟 /
interjection
- an expression of amusement or derision Alsohe-he!hee-hee!
Grammar Note
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of he1
Origin of he2
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of he1
Example Sentences
It gets hearty laughs by flattening Russell鈥檚 Walker 鈥 a tragic Afghanistan veteran confused by the government鈥檚 inconsistency about when he鈥檚 allowed to kill 鈥 into a spoof of bossy, paternalistic privilege.
He has been at Churchill Downs biding his time while waiting for an opening in the race.
Redick went from coaching unknown to a successful culture builder, even if his boldest strategies in the playoffs didn鈥檛 keep the Lakers from being eliminated after just five 亚洲网紅露点 for the second straight year.
Kling, who lost his home in the Palisades fire, is the winningest high school tennis coach in state history, having amassed more than 1,440 victories.
The 鈥渟watting鈥 incidents he organized in 2020 took place in California, Michigan, Montana, Georgia, Virginia, Texas, Illinois, Florida and Alabama.
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