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sche
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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Middle English
Alternative forms
- che, cho, sce, scha, schee, scho, sco, se, she, shee, sho, shouȝ, so
- scæ, sge (Early Middle English); schew, schewe (Late Middle English)
- schoe, schu, schue, shou, shue, shuo (Devon); sse, sso (Gloucestershire); shew, show (Lincolnshire); xe, xhe (Norfolk); cheo, sscheo (Shropshire)
- scheo, sȝheo, sheo, shoe (Southwestern, Southwest Midland); choy, schoe, schow, schowe, schoy, schu, shae, shoy (Yorkshire)
Etymology
Most likely from Old English hēo, hīo (“she”), from Proto-West Germanic *hiju, from Proto-Germanic *hijō f (“this, this one”), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱe-, *ḱey- (“this, here”), but see she for more. Compare heo.
Pronunciation
Pronoun
sche (accusative hire, genitive hire, possessive determiner hires, hiren)
Usage notes
- In addition to referring to female humans and animals, this pronoun was used for inanimate objects belonging to the feminine grammatical gender early in Middle English. As grammatical gender obsolesced, this pronoun continued to refer to inanimate objects.
Descendants
See also
1 Used preconsonantally or before h.
2 Early or dialectal.
3 Dual pronouns are only sporadically found in Early Middle English; after that, they are replaced by plural forms. There are no third person dual forms in Middle English.
4 Sometimes used as a formal 2nd person singular.
2 Early or dialectal.
3 Dual pronouns are only sporadically found in Early Middle English; after that, they are replaced by plural forms. There are no third person dual forms in Middle English.
4 Sometimes used as a formal 2nd person singular.
References
- “shẹ̄, pron.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 9 May 2018.
- McIntosh, Angus; Samuels, M[ichael] L.; Benskin, Michael (2013) [1986], Michael Benskin, Margaret Laing, editors, eLALME: A Linguistic Atlas of Late Medieval English, Edinburgh: Angus McIntosh Centre for Historical Linguistics; revised 2024 November.
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Romansch
Etymology
Conjunction
sche
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