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by davidgh
1404 days ago
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You have it exactly backwards. Thou is singular and informal, ye is plural and / or singular formal. Ye is a second-person, plural, personal pronoun (nominative), spelled in Old English as "ge". [0] The word thou is a second-person singular pronoun in English. It is now largely archaic, having been replaced in most contexts by the word you. [1] [0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ye_(pronoun) [1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thou |
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We deprecated ye and thou, but it’s the latter that “requires” y’all, because only thou (relative to us still having you) distinguishes the number of people.
Edit: put another way, “thou/thee is the one with number” meant that reintroducing them would create a number distinction.