Search results
4 sty 2019 · Thou = you when the subject (“Thou liketh writing.”) Thee = you when the object (“Writing liketh thee.”) Thy = your possessive form of you. (“Thy blade well serves thee.”) Thine = your possessive form of you, typically used before a noun.
22 wrz 2010 · Learn how to use "thee" and "thou" as second person singular pronouns in Early Modern English. See examples, usage, and historical context from the Bible translations and regional dialects.
Co znaczy i jak powiedzieć "thou art" po polsku? - tyś jest, ty jesteś (zwrot używany m.in. w Biblii)
The word thou ( / ðaʊ /) is a second-person singular pronoun in English. It is now largely archaic, having been replaced in most contexts by the word you, although it remains in use in parts of Northern England and in Scots ( /ðu:/ ).
18 sie 2019 · It’s a common myth that Shakespeare never uses the words “you” and “your” – actually, these words are commonplace in his plays. However, he also uses the words “thee / thou” instead of “you” and the word “thy / thine” instead of “your”. Sometimes he uses both “you” and “thy” in the same speech.
Shakespeare’s plays are filled with the interplay of you and thou, with characters expressing mistrust and suspicion, formality, affection, love, a business-like relationship, insults and so on, sometimes those words dancing around each other in a single conversation.