In your example, she is being emphasised. 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.
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. When talking about or referring to someone who could either be a male or a female, i usually write it as (s)he but i have also seen usage like he/she, which also seems correct to me According to the farlex partner idioms dictionary the expression This phrase dates back to the early 17th century
I'm wondering where the phrase originates Who's 'she', the cat's mother (idiomatic, somewhat dated, britain, new england) a rebuke especially directed towards children for having referred to a w. :) isn't is a contraction of is not He's/she's is a contraction of she is/he is They are just different ways of writing the same sentence.
I can't find my daughter I was buying these clothes at the register, and she was right behing me, and now she’s gone. written she's gone How i understand which one is mean?. That's what she said is a saying that flips a normal statement into a sexual one If you blow it too much, it'll explode [a balloon] that's what she said How did this phrase come ab.
The book's protagonist and narrator attempted to assassinate a character, but it is soon said that the victim is still alive She is taken to the hospital, and another character announces that she has died At the end of the story, the character who had died returns, still alive I don't know if the ending is a hallucination or if the victim.
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