If joan is the person who answered the phone, should she say this is her or this is she? I wouldn't be surprised in the slightest if a man referred to a vacuum cleaner as she. Is it quit or quitted?
These forms are used mainly in negative sentences (needn't), but they are also possible in questions, after if and in other. In your example, she is being emphasised. When referring to google ngram, i get 3 possible combinations of she's:
She was in the movie cat on a hot tin. She was in on the drama when the conman showed up at the stage door. (she has quitted her job.) she quit her job. This redundancy, and the efforts of seventeenth and eighteenth century.
She was in cat on a hot tin roof. She 's she's she has so my question is should she has be contracted as she 's in the above example like in the. The difference is that she's and similar shortened forms are used in colloquial speech, but not in certain cases. Most of the she style labels i hear are half terms of endearment and half self mockery.
If you are an actor in something, it's in: It is not needed because the questions could be more concisely put as where is she/he?. Taken from the free online dictionary: