Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Mar 4, 2008 08:38
16 yrs ago
4 viewers *
English term
who be thee?
English
Art/Literary
General / Conversation / Greetings / Letters
"who are you?". Quite a lot of hits on Google.
The question is: can this "thee" refer to two persons (plural)?
The question is: can this "thee" refer to two persons (plural)?
Responses
3 +3 | ye | Armorel Young |
4 +5 | who are you | Nurzhan KZ |
4 +1 | singular only | Andrew Levine |
3 +1 | Yes, I think it could possibly be singular or plural. | Jack Doughty |
Responses
+3
7 mins
Selected
ye
The plural of thou/thee is ye. However, I would hesitate to recommend "Who be ye" without knowing what the context or period is.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
writeaway
: yes, ye is the plural. imho, the 'be' is used because it's actually subjunctive: who (would/might) thee be ?
2 mins
|
agree |
Vicky Nash
2 hrs
|
agree |
Alexandra Tussing
1 day 18 hrs
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks!"
+1
3 mins
singular only
"Thee/Thou" were only used as singular pronouns, object and nominative respectively.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thee
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thee
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Gary D
: Mostly used in Plays, and can also apply to a Fictitious character, like a ghost. I use "Thee" in poems I write, look at my profile
3 hrs
|
+1
6 mins
Yes, I think it could possibly be singular or plural.
Strictly speaking this is ungrammatical, since "thee" in Old English is the accusative form of "thou", which is the second person singular. But this is in a dialect of some kind, so I don't think you can be sure that the strict rules of grammar apply. "Who art thou?" in good Old English could only be singular.
+5
4 mins
who are you
that should be right
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Note added at 11 мин (2008-03-04 08:50:00 GMT)
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more like one person...
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Note added at 1 дн4 мин (2008-03-05 08:42:40 GMT)
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The word ‘thee’ is used as a pronoun and the meaning that you can figure out from the use of this word is ‘you’. The word has another peculiarity about itself and you can use it only when you are talking to only one person and the person should be the object of the verb.
Though the word exists but these days seldom can you find a person using it as it is considered as of old use; you is the word that is used by people in modern day English. If somebody is using the word in modern day English, it is hardly used in prose and only poets have the quality to use these archaic words for the sake of better effect or sometimes to create musical effect.
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Note added at 1 дн4 мин (2008-03-05 08:43:20 GMT)
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from: http://www.blurtit.com/q584612.html
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Note added at 11 мин (2008-03-04 08:50:00 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
more like one person...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 дн4 мин (2008-03-05 08:42:40 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
The word ‘thee’ is used as a pronoun and the meaning that you can figure out from the use of this word is ‘you’. The word has another peculiarity about itself and you can use it only when you are talking to only one person and the person should be the object of the verb.
Though the word exists but these days seldom can you find a person using it as it is considered as of old use; you is the word that is used by people in modern day English. If somebody is using the word in modern day English, it is hardly used in prose and only poets have the quality to use these archaic words for the sake of better effect or sometimes to create musical effect.
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Note added at 1 дн4 мин (2008-03-05 08:43:20 GMT)
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from: http://www.blurtit.com/q584612.html
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Jonathan MacKerron
21 mins
|
agree |
Carol Gullidge
: still used today (though rarely, as the dialect disappears...) in Devon, where I live. You also still frequently hear 'ow be 'ee? (how be ye?) used in the singular
28 mins
|
agree |
Alfa Trans (X)
11 hrs
|
agree |
Alexandra Tussing
1 day 18 hrs
|
agree |
V_Nedkov
3 days 7 hrs
|
Discussion