|
This article is about the Middle English personal pronoun. For other uses, see Ye.
Ye (IPA: /jiː/ or, traditionally /ðiː/) was the second-person, plural, personal pronoun (Nominative) in Old English as "ge". In Middle English and Early Modern English it was also used to direct an equal or superior person. It is also common today in Ireland's Hiberno-English to distinguish from the singular "you". The use of the term "Ye" to represent a pseudo-Early Modern English form of the word "the" (such as "Ye Olde Shoppe")is, in fact, incorrect. This mistaken attribution is due to the medieval usage of the letter thorn (þ) the predecessor to the modern digraph "th". Thorn (þ) is a letter which is today only in common use in Icelandic. The word "The" was thus written Þe. Medieval printing presses didn't contain the letter "thorn", so the y was substituted due to its similarity in some medieval scripts, especially later ones. EtymologyIn Old English, ye was governed by a fairly simple rule: thou addressed one person, and ye more than one. After the Norman Conquest, which marks the beginning of the French vocabulary influence that characterized the Middle English period, thou was gradually replaced by the plural ye as the form of address for a superior and later for an equal. The practice of matching singular and plural forms with informal and formal connotations is called the T-V distinction, and in English is largely due to the influence of French. This began with the practice of addressing kings and other aristocrats in the plural. Eventually, this was generalized, as in French, to address any social superior or stranger with a plural pronoun, which was felt to be more polite. In French, tu was eventually considered either intimate or condescending (and, to a stranger, potentially insulting), while the plural form vous was reserved and formal. In Early Modern English, ye functioned as both an informal plural and formal singular second-person nominative pronoun.[citation needed]
References
See also
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
This site monitored by SitePinger.net