A third-person pronoun is a pronoun that refers to an entity other than the speaker or listener.
1Lou, the funky, reassuringly daft, all-purpose parent figure was obviously a 'hir.'
2John Shields Cut out my Small rifle & brought hir to Shoot very well.
3On the beautiful portrait of Andrews, is the autograph of Annie Brokett hir Blook!
4Of course I couldn't be expected to let a hir-tolet a boy kiss me.
5Then he chargeth hir, to procure as manie men, women, and children also, as she can, to enter into this societie....
6There was no one like M. Le Hir in this respect.
7Hir opens at the Herald Theatre in Auckland on August 2nd.
8He much more nearly resembled M. Garnier than M. Le Hir.
9Sepham also and Hapham the sons of Hir: and Hasim the sons of Aher.
10Remember the great Men-kau-ra, remember the old Pharaoh who built the Pyramid of Hir.
11And the messengers that went were Iddic the son of Anarawd, and Heveydd Hir.
12And Hir Eiddyl, and Hir Amreu (they were two attendants of Arthur).
13And the messengers that went were Iddic, the son of Anarawd, and Heveyd Hir.
14As a comparative grammarian, M. Quatremère was also very inferior to M. Le Hir.
15And the sons of Caleb the son of Jephone, were Hir, and Ela, and Naham.
16Officials have said Bin Hir was likely killed in the firefight, but Usman had escaped.