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You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote I think he's not and she's not are stronger because they put more emphasis on the word not than he. Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful
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What's reputation and how do i get it Is there a difference in usage between he isn't/she isn't and he's not/she's not Instead, you can save this post to reference later.
I saw this from globalnews.ca
Molly johnson on the album she’s always wanted to make when referring to google ngram, i get 3 possible combinations of she's She 's she's she has so my questio. Possibly the difference is cadence When words are emphasized, the emphasis is some difference in any or all of
Volume, pitch, duration, and shape So when she's is unemphasized there is a small difference in the sound of it If we tend to emphasize she has more than we emphasize she is, then that might be reflected in the pronunciation of the contraction. Randle cotgrave compiled and published a dictionarie of the french and english tongues in 1611, which included putte
A wench, laſſe, girle, modder
(eſpecially one that is no better than ſhe ſhould be.) so the phrase is presumably older than that The word, with the same meaning of sexual promiscuity, is written pute in modern french. I heard this expression in the tv series better call saul A character spoke to a secretary, and he seemed annoyed
After he spoke to her chief and said your secretary is a real pip Recently, a woman i know who lives in england (ok, she's my fiancee, if you want to know), wrote to me and described someone she knows as a bit of a tartar Now in context it seemed like a frien. I have sometimes heard the word indisposed use as synonymous for unavailable. especially in the context of leaving a message
My daughter just submitted a college app and said her pronouns were "she/they"
I told her, in the nicest way that i didn't want to be demeaning, but your pronouns can't be "she/the.