Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

he she

1) a cross-dressing man who actually looks like a woman; or 2) a man who either had a sex change operation or in undergoing hormone treatment to become a woman

I don't have a problem with cross-dressers per se. My problem is when you can't tell that "she" is really a "he!"

by Silky Smooth March 10, 2004

he she

Name, masculine (feminine She He). A way to pronounce an otherwise unpronaunceable chinese name. As in Latin or German the name is declined, becoming for example Him Her in accusative case

1) "He She is sooooo cute!" "He or she??" "Both" 2) "He She enjoys reading She He's literassture" 3) "I love Him Her" "who??" "who cares"

by B^B December 25, 2009

he she

one with a cock and cunt

i met a hot chick at the club, brought her own only to find out she wuz a he she, then i busted a cap in her ass.

by Anonymous July 11, 2003

He/she

An outdated term for they

"It says here he/she can then turn the switch to on" "Wow those instructions must be outdated"

by deafinitionplshelpicanthear November 02, 2020

he-she

A person like myself that has both male and female genitals. At birth the doctors didn't know what i was so my parents chose a sex for me. I am now a male. I was born with both ovarian and testicular tissue. You can still see some male and female sexual characteristics though I take hormones.

I am intersex, also known as a 'hermaphrodite' or he-she

by Sonny Vitale. October 14, 2007

he/she

He/she is a set of pronouns containing both the pronoun sets of she/her and he/him. It is used typically by people who identify as both masculine and feminine genders, but anyone who feels comfortable with them can use these pronouns if they fit you. In some cases the person putting he first instead of she can indicate a preference for he, but this is not every case and can be the opposite or they can be equal.

Oh, Darell goes by he/she pronouns. It means he can be called she or he. Sometimes she prefers one over the other as well.

by kozacore November 29, 2020

He/she

(Specifically in written forms and not someone just having a good time with their prounouns) A thing I want to white out everytime I see it

"I heard someone, idk, fell into the river. I bet he/she-" "Whoa- hold on buddy, we aren't in 1812 England, speak normally please"

by July 19, 2021