They — (IPAEng|ðeɪ) is a third person, personal pronoun (subject case) in Modern English.UsageThe singular they is the use of this pronoun, where they is used as a gender neutral singular rather than plural pronoun. The correctness of this usage is… … Wikipedia
They — ([th][=a]), pron. pl.; poss. {Theirs}; obj. {Them}. [Icel. [thorn]eir they, properly nom. pl. masc. of s[=a], s[=u], [thorn]at, a demonstrative pronoun, akin to the English definite article, AS. s[=e], se[ o], [eth][ae]t, nom. pl. [eth][=a]. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
They Go On — was an dot com era Internet only soap opera developed by Levi Strauss Co. and NBC Digital Productions and streamed from NBC s website. The show, funded entirely by Levi Strauss, was based on characters from their advertising campaign of the same… … Wikipedia
they — pronoun, plural in construction Etymology: Middle English, from Old Norse their, masculine plural demonstrative & personal pronoun; akin to Old English thæt that Date: 13th century 1. a. those ones used as third person pronoun serving as the… … New Collegiate Dictionary
they'd — Date: 1599 they had ; they would … New Collegiate Dictionary
they'll — Date: 1567 they will ; they shall … New Collegiate Dictionary
they — See: LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY … Dictionary of American idioms
they — See: LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY … Dictionary of American idioms
They — He He (h[=e]), pron. [nom. {He}; poss. {His} (h[i^]z); obj. {Him} (h[i^]m); pl. nom. {They} ([th][=a]); poss. {Their} or {Theirs} ([th][^a]rz or [th][=a]rz); obj. {Them} ([th][e^]m).] [AS. h[=e], masc., he[ o], fem., hit, neut.; pl. h[=i], or hie … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
They — She She, pron. [sing. nom. {She}; poss. {Her}. or {Hers}; obj. {Her}; pl. nom. {They}; poss. {Their}or {Theirs}; obj. {Them}.] [OE. she, sche, scheo, scho, AS. se[ o], fem. of the definite article, originally a demonstrative pronoun; cf. OS. siu … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
they're — Date: circa 1595 they are … New Collegiate Dictionary