View example sentences and word forms for She.
She meaning
The female (typically) person or animal previously mentioned or implied. | A ship or boat. | A country, or sometimes a city, province, planet, etc.
She vertaling naar Nederlands
Example sentences (20)
When she come home she gon hustle mek she thing dem cook she fancy food for she children dem, she was a very, very good mother and wife and she ain’t deserve it,” the sister said.
At first, she wasn’t sure she wanted to run, but the more she thought about it the more she realized the value she could provide, she said.
Bell’s role seems both less defined and somehow more centrifugal: she oversaw the gardeners; she pruned and weeded; she cut flowers to relish in the house; she painted, she painted, she painted.
She was asked when her memory went 'fuzzy', and she said she gave someone a lift who told her 'go left, go right' but she didn't know how she ended up where she did.
She mentioned the position she said they were in. She said she “blacked out” and did not remember how her clothes came off, though she said she did not consume alcohol or drugs and never said “no” to Trump during the encounter.
When she had lost 80lbs she started working out the calories she was eating so she could make sure she was burning more calories than she took in.
One woman told CBS2 she was in her apartment when she saw the protest pass. She said she decided to leave her friends and join the march because she felt she needed to be part of the movement.
She has four children and she usually gets a break from them when she’s working, but because she’s not working thanks to the pandemic, she’s been home and she’s been parenting alone seeing as her husband tested positive.
She might never get out, she thinks, but the moment she sees Foster’s eyes close and the way his whole body exhales abruptly every time she brushes an index finger along his blistered skin, she believes maybe she isn’t so bad after all.
She’s 40, and she seems 40, and she seems cool with being 40. She keeps her hair blond, the color of her childhood, which I know because she once answered the phone by saying she had tinfoil on her head.
She says she feels a burden and, recently, she broke my heart when she asked if she had disappointed me — and if we thought this had happened because she doesn’t believe in God.
She told her brother, Colin, that she thought she was going insane and she worried that she was a danger to others because she was filled with rage.
She said about two weeks ago while she was being treated at the facility, she was injected with a suspected anaesthetic drug and when she recovered she was feeling dizzy and had semen on her private parts, suspecting that she could have been raped.
While she says she’s her sister, Jessica says she’s lost the last family member she had, and when she looks at Trish, she can only see the woman who killed her mother.
Instead of saying sorry or that she felt guilty for what she did, she told him that she wanted to begin seeing this other guy that she was talking to.
No matter where she is, she says, she is still trying to do as many things as she can to speak for Ukraine, and have her voice heard wherever she is.
She described herself the next day as not having a snarky or competitive bone in her body, but as soon as she learned she was accepted into the contest, she built a spreadsheet on her competition — not to get a competitive edge, she insisted.
She didn’t even want to go to school anymore, but I told her no, that she had to go and she had to learn, but she felt they discriminated against her because she couldn’t speak English.
She explained that she doesn't know where she got the name from but when she searched for it online she found that it is Judi Dench’s daughter’s nickname.
She philosophized and she changed diapers, she challenged the president of the United States and she kissed her husband before she died.