Science Fair Project Dictionary
Categories: English language | Old English | Indo-European root *yu-
Ye
| Table of contents |
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Pronunciation
SAMPA : /ji:/
Etymology (1)
- from Anglo-Saxon ge, the nominative case of the second person plural personal pronoun. See also you.
Personal pronoun
- [Archaic] you (the people being addressed).
- Note: Ye was originally used only used for the nominative case (as the subject), and only for the second person plural. Later, ye was used as a subject or an object, either singular or plural, which is the way that you is used today.
Etymology (2)
- from the Middle English Þe. Printers who couldn't reproduce the "Þ" (thorn) character (which corresponds to the modern "th" sound), substitued a "y". Despite the use of 'y', it was still read "the".
Definite article
- [archaic]: the.
- Ye Olde Medicine Shoppe.
Preposition
Categories: English language | Old English | Indo-European root *yu-
10-26-2009 07:45:12
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The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


