To conjugate a verb preceded by thou, -st is added after a verb, so correctly it is 'when thou hast been ...' and not hath because hath is for 3rd-person singular pronouns e.g. He, She, & It.
It's really funny that Germans have much less difficulties with understanding Early Modern English than English people... thou - du thy - dein thee - dir (indirect objekt)/ dich (direct object) thine - dein thou art = du bist thou hast = du hast thou comest = du kommst thou goest = du gehst
Norwegian: thou - du thy - din _m_, di _f_, ditt _n_, dine _pl_ thee - deg thine - (same as thy) thou art = du er thou hast = du har (elder: du hev) thou comest = du kjem thou goest = du går (elder: du gjeng)
These words are still in use today in West Yorkshire where I was born, known locally as 'thee and thou Yorkshire' " Tek thee sen art " means take your self out. " Thar " used as you're , as in 'thar's reet' you are right. As a footnote, when you see 'Ye' written, as in 'Ye old curiosity shop' or 'Ye olde starre inn', this is not pronounced 'yee', the 'Y' symbol was used to represent ' th '
It`s because English and Norwegian are in one branch of indo-europian languages family. (Germanic). It`s interesting, but In Armenian:(that isn`t even germanic,but is also IE.lang.) that words are pretty similar to germanic... Thou-Du Thee-Dug\Duq Thy,Thin- Dun -----------------------------Also--------------------------------------- Cow-Cov Door-dur similar prefix-Un and suffix-Ian........ ^_^
LittleBaby every germanic language does. German du-dich-dir-dein-deines. I study languages and the "you" comes from the plural version of you. Dere in norweigan
I like how similar all of the Germanic languages are. English really is too, it is just spoken by lazy idiots with no regard for rules or grammar. And it was mixed with French.
Also--English has changed from highly synthetic to analytic. In analytic languages, word order (Subject-Verb-Object) is most important in determining meaning. English merged the accusative and dative cases into one objective case. This is why German at first looks easy to learn for English speakers, but turns out to be just as difficult as Romance languages. Gendered nouns and articles can be a bitch to learn, for some.
I noticed they used 'ye' (in the place of 'you') as a subject pronoun in the west of Ireland, where English was introduced starting from the 1600s onwards (slowly replacing Irish Gaelic). Maybe elsewhere in Ireland too.
This "ye" is not to be confused with the ye on old signs of businesses, like "Ye Olde Tavern". That Ye is a whole different story, and it just means "The". There used to be a letter in the English alphabet for the "Th" sound, but certain printing presses did not have that letter, so they used "Y" instead.
English language should revive the distinction between «thou» and «ye». That would make the live of everyone easier. Thou art my friend, but ye are also my friends.
I was learning English for a long time and met this strange words. I've googled that they were old form of pronouns but every time I heard a sentence it was different from what I'd expected. The problem was in merging subject and object in nowadays English. Amazing vid, explained greatly!
In Scandinavia we have these very similar parallel forms, where an original th- has changed into a d ( thu --> du) :du [doo]dig [digh, origially [deegh] or even dik / thik!]din [deen] , + dit & dine ( plural)digAlso the second person plural pronoun in Danish is " I " [ee*] , which corresponds to "ye" in English.And in general:jeg [yigh] ( rhymes with I ), mig [migh],min [meen]du, dig [digh] , din [deen]han (!) ( even pronounced [ha'] in parts of Jutland, Western Denmark ), ham (!), hansden / det ( ~ it / that )vi [ve*], os [us] (!), vor /voresI [ee*],jer [yer], jeres [yer-es] (!) de [ dee*], dem (!), deres (!)
In Slovak, my native language it's: Thou: Ty Thee: Teba/Tebe ( "I see thee" would be: "Ja vidím *teba* " and "I give an apple to thee" would be: "Ja dám jablko *tebe* " ) (The latter form "Tebe" is used in the Dative case) Thy: Tvoj/tvoja ("Thy husband": " *Tvoj* manžel" or "Thy wife": " *Tvoja* manželka") Thine: Tvoje ("It is thine": Je to tvoje") Slovak grammar is much more complex than English grammar. These english versions of "you" and "your" sound very natural and easy to me cause my native language is already complex as heck.
For those of you who may be wandering, the ye in "ye olde" is not ye at all, it's actually þe. Over time, Þ started looking more and more like a y, and when the printing press was brought to England, people opted to use the y instead of Þ. Btw, Þ is uppercase and þ is lowercase.
Fantastic! We have similar pronouns when addressing one person in Russian ТЫ (ТИ in Ukrainian) and ВЫ ( ВИ in Ukrainian) when addressing many people or to show respect towards one person. It is interesting to note that in some Ukrainian families kids still address their parent using ВИ.
в этих языках куча слов родственных, но это не значит что английский произошел от славянского или наоборот, это подчеркивает что в древности был один индоевропейский язык. например слово Thu-ты тhat-тот, эТОТ. Flame-Пламя матерь-mother grab-ГРАБить(просто в русском языке поменялось значение, сюда по смыслу может подойти слово заГРЕБать) Pray-ПРосить(но слово Pray это латинское заимствование, в и оно заместило исконно английское слово Fracgian, сравните с нынешнем немецким слово fragen(спрашивать) все эти слова pray, fracgian, просить-имеют общие корни. Тын(забор)-Town(в древнеанглийском было такое слово как Tun, что означало частокол, или высокий забор) День-day( в древнеанглийском писалось как daeg) и таких слов тысячи
You don't just add -est to every other word. You only do that when conjugating a verb to the pronoun Thou. And the same goes for -eth for 3rd person. "Dost thou go?" (Do you go) "Thou doest go" (You do go)
I have a question, (although I know this vid is old) I was wrtiimg a song in english (not my native tongue) and i came across a phonetical problem, I needed to find a word that kept the meaning of the phrase, rhymed with the lyrics prior and fit the melody, I figured that the word "Thee", though very archaic, did the job, plus in my native language we sometimes use somewhat archaic words if we need to rhyme and fit the lyrics into a melody, so to me it was no big deal. But I've NEVER heard an english song use "thee" as a pronoun, so I'm a bit on the fence if I should use it or not. (And I know music has poetic license to do whatever, bit I'm still lookimg for opinions.)
Now here's something I'm not sure about. Do we use "mine" and "thine" as "my" and "your" when the next noun starts with a vowel ? As in "Mine eyes, thine eyes."
Why do we capitalize I and not me or my? It refers to the proper person. Also, one way to distinguish when to or when not to say me such as in him and I instead of he and I or him and me or him and I, is to remove the him and see which one sounds correct, works every time.
In German we capitalize the formal and polite "you". For example: "Wir schicken Ihnen dieses Packet zurück" (We send You back this package), and the extinct "thou" would be the informal way to adress somebody like your friends, spouse or family. An example with Modern German and Early Modern English using thee and thou: "Markus, du hast schon wieder vergessen deine Hausaufgaben zu machen!!" ("Marcus, thou (you) hast (have) forgotten once again to do thy (your) homework!!") The integration of "do" has driven English away from German, as well, like the germans just say the verb and put some extra letters without saying "do" infront of it.
Whither dith he wend anon? = where did he go now? Inflexions are only the second person and third person singular. All the rest are the same as common English( in verbs)
SINGULAR nom. thou gen. thy, thine (before vowels) dat. thee acc. thee poss. pron. thine reflex./emph. thyself PLURAL nom. ye gen. your dat. you acc. you poss. pron. yours reflex./emph. yourselves SINGULAR nom. I gen. my, mine (before vowels) dat. me acc. me poss. pron. mine reflex./emph. myself Note. In Early Modern English, objective pronouns are used for reflexive use, e.g. Now I lay me down to sleep.
It’s too bad. I’ll take all of thee’s and thou’s I can get. Particularly thee. There’s just something about that word that gets me. The Quakers never used thou. Thee was used in every case rather than you or thou. I love that stuff. I love the way the Quakers used to use that and I wish they still did. As in, I love thee. Thee is mine.
You is formal speech. The, thou thy etc. is familier. You use the familier with family and friends. Suprisingly the familier is used in prayer. You are speaking to God as father. Likewise you would use the familier with the Sovereign as father of the nation. Ye is just the plural, not for use to kings. "Praise the Lord all ye peoples..."
In Working-class (Bogan) Australian too "What are youse up to?" . But 'youse' is stigmatised as low class in Australia. In more general or neutral use 'you guys' is more acceptable.
I see a lot of comments saying "what am I doing here? English is not even my first language". Then well done buddy! Now u can rub on people's faces u know advanced stuff in English when they don't even KNOW English to begin with
MATE!!!..That was brilliant 🏆Propa-💎-Banter Geeza😎🕴🏿😎 In retrograde ONE thunk it appropriate to venture a retrospective appraisal of that t''was: accurate, informative and smile inducing... So much so - That one laugh, escaping off a well-endowed arse, shrieked a deadly parp, WHILE trying to buy drinks at a bar.😊.. 😂😂👏🏾👏🏾🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿Yes me brudda 👍🏾🎖👍🏾 Its Ab-sol-ute-ly good you know..... 😎😎👨🏾🎓👨🏼🎓👨🏾🎓😎😎
Thou = singular subject you Thee = singular object you Thy = singular subject your Thine = singular object yours Ye = plural subject you You = plural object you Your = plural subject your Yours = plural object your Th = singular Y = plural
english is very funny language though... very limited words are there in english dictionary.. many words borrowed from latin... greek... sanskrit ... etc..etc...
Thou- singular you
Thee: object pronoun (she likes "you")
Thy: your
Thine: yours
Thank thee so much.
So is it
“ i love thou” or “i love thee”?😣
@@LazyLaw- if your a girl just say thee I guess
Also thyself: yourself
Many thanks to thou. Thou art a pogger.
Oh God, English is not even my first language, what am I doing here?
@@dendiepie1547 yeah, you're pretty good at rating someone's english based on 1 sentence that doesn't even have complex grammar, or fancy vocab.
Thou art not alone.
English isn't my first language either and I'm loving this video.
@@lucifermorningstar3850 Art.
@Keoni MorenoOMG we can do whatever we want
When thou hath been enlightened with this godly content produced by the allfather himself
*I am no longer a mortal peasant of simple thought*
To conjugate a verb preceded by thou, -st is added after a verb, so correctly it is 'when thou hast been ...' and not hath because hath is for 3rd-person singular pronouns e.g. He, She, & It.
*"Thou Yeet thine child"*
Yeeteth*
i giggled
"You yeet yours child"
*thy child
Thy child*
Dark souls series brings me here
Nazrin Shah it always bothers me that the giant blacksmith says “cometh soon” when that is like saying “(he/she) comes”, not “come soon”
I came here after the Sister Friede boss fight, damn her speech is so beautiful
yuria lol
Osvald of Carim brought me here
Hollow Knight brings me here
It's really funny that Germans have much less difficulties with understanding Early Modern English than English people...
thou - du
thy - dein
thee - dir (indirect objekt)/ dich (direct object)
thine - dein
thou art = du bist
thou hast = du hast
thou comest = du kommst
thou goest = du gehst
+Hans Power Swiss geman speaker agrees haha
+Hans Power As well as in Portuguese
Thou - Tu
Thee - Ti/Te
Thy/Thine - Teu(s)/Tua(s)
I JUST LEARN GERMAN
It's the same with Norwegian. It seems like Old English is more similar to other Germanic languages than modern nglish.
Norwegian:
thou - du
thy - din _m_, di _f_, ditt _n_, dine _pl_
thee - deg
thine - (same as thy)
thou art = du er
thou hast = du har (elder: du hev)
thou comest = du kjem
thou goest = du går (elder: du gjeng)
first time I ever wanted someone to push their videos to 12 minutes.
“Thou hast journeyed far, Chosen Undead”
Ye suckard pleb!
Finally!
"I am thou, thou art I"
P e r s o n a 5 ?
He is I and I am thou
isn't it supposed to be i am thee?
Thanks so much sir
Does thou needith thine writing pad further thus??
Thou: Tu, Du.
Thee: ti, toi e te
Thy: teu, tuo, ton e tuyo
Thine: teus, tui, tons e tuyos
Ye: vós, vos, voi e vous
Why am I ever here? Spanish is my first language. Anyway, it's a very interesting and simple way to understand the archaic English.
Hi
bruh sameeeeeee
It's not completely archaic, we still have people who use these words in parts of Scotland and the north of England.
I was playing Elden Ring and Ranni’s way of speaking led me to this video
These words are still in use today in West Yorkshire where I was born, known locally as 'thee and thou Yorkshire'
" Tek thee sen art " means take your self out.
" Thar " used as you're , as in 'thar's reet' you are right.
As a footnote, when you see 'Ye' written, as in 'Ye old curiosity shop' or 'Ye olde starre inn', this is not pronounced 'yee', the 'Y' symbol was used to represent ' th '
In Norwegian, we have similar pronouns.
Thou = Du
Thee = Deg
Thy, Thine = *Din* (masculine singular), *di* (feminine singular), *ditt* (neuter singular), *dine* (plural)
It`s because English and Norwegian are in one branch of indo-europian languages family. (Germanic).
It`s interesting, but In Armenian:(that isn`t even germanic,but is also IE.lang.) that words are pretty similar to germanic...
Thou-Du
Thee-Dug\Duq
Thy,Thin- Dun
-----------------------------Also---------------------------------------
Cow-Cov
Door-dur
similar prefix-Un and suffix-Ian........
^_^
My head hurts
LittleBaby every germanic language does. German du-dich-dir-dein-deines. I study languages and the "you" comes from the plural version of you. Dere in norweigan
Sounds Germanic after reading another comment
I like how similar all of the Germanic languages are. English really is too, it is just spoken by lazy idiots with no regard for rules or grammar. And it was mixed with French.
Also--English has changed from highly synthetic to analytic. In analytic languages, word order (Subject-Verb-Object) is most important in determining meaning. English merged the accusative and dative cases into one objective case. This is why German at first looks easy to learn for English speakers, but turns out to be just as difficult as Romance languages. Gendered nouns and articles can be a bitch to learn, for some.
Ye hath acquired much knowledge in thine field. Me impressed many.
There are still dialects of English that use ye as a plural version.
do they use thou and stuff too
I noticed they used 'ye' (in the place of 'you') as a subject pronoun in the west of Ireland, where English was introduced starting from the 1600s onwards (slowly replacing Irish Gaelic). Maybe elsewhere in Ireland too.
This "ye" is not to be confused with the ye on old signs of businesses, like "Ye Olde Tavern". That Ye is a whole different story, and it just means "The". There used to be a letter in the English alphabet for the "Th" sound, but certain printing presses did not have that letter, so they used "Y" instead.
Thee Thy Shall Forth Gospel Jesus Saviour Saints
Ashen one, may the flame guides thee.
I should like to thank thee for this video. Thou shouldst make more about this subject.
Khangi Luta I adore thee’s profile picture of thou fair lady samara from thy ring franchise 😂
I thank thee for thy comment, but thou shouldst have said: "I adore THY profile picture of THEE, fair lady Samara, from The Ring francise."
Khangi Luta I apologise to thee
Thou art most welcome, kind sir.
English language should revive the distinction between «thou» and «ye». That would make the live of everyone easier.
Thou art my friend, but ye are also my friends.
Wait , so ye is actual word not a meme
Shakespearean
Where: Whither
There: thither
Here: hither
You: thee/thou
Your: thy/thine
Why: wherefore
@@wednesday8728 I guess he really liked TH syllables
Words are actually memes
@@enzoysshakespear didn’t make Early Modern English-
I was learning English for a long time and met this strange words. I've googled that they were old form of pronouns but every time I heard a sentence it was different from what I'd expected. The problem was in merging subject and object in nowadays English. Amazing vid, explained greatly!
“Great explanation”. 😅
So I’m guessing English isn’t your first language? You speak it well. 😊
In Scandinavia we have these very similar parallel forms, where an original th- has changed into a d ( thu --> du) :du [doo]dig [digh, origially [deegh] or even dik / thik!]din [deen] , + dit & dine ( plural)digAlso the second person plural pronoun in Danish is " I " [ee*] , which corresponds to "ye" in English.And in general:jeg [yigh] ( rhymes with I ), mig [migh],min [meen]du, dig [digh] , din [deen]han (!) ( even pronounced [ha'] in parts of Jutland, Western Denmark ), ham (!), hansden / det ( ~ it / that )vi [ve*], os [us] (!), vor /voresI [ee*],jer [yer], jeres [yer-es] (!) de [ dee*], dem (!), deres (!)
Dude is that even english
art thou headless?
In Slovak, my native language it's:
Thou: Ty
Thee: Teba/Tebe ( "I see thee" would be: "Ja vidím *teba* " and "I give an apple to thee" would be: "Ja dám jablko *tebe* " ) (The latter form "Tebe" is used in the Dative case)
Thy: Tvoj/tvoja ("Thy husband": " *Tvoj* manžel" or "Thy wife": " *Tvoja* manželka")
Thine: Tvoje ("It is thine": Je to tvoje")
Slovak grammar is much more complex than English grammar. These english versions of "you" and "your" sound very natural and easy to me cause my native language is already complex as heck.
Great lesson - well and entertainingly made!! I'm going to show it to my advanced English learners at Bologna University.
Thy channel is tremendously great
Thou art awesome!
in northern england we also say Tha for you as well as Thee
i think it's like Classic Chinese, for example:
"you" in Modern Chinese is 「你」, but in Classic Chinese back in the days are 「爾」、「汝」
俺,洒家
I watched this when i met Rouxls Kaard on deltarune
same!! rouxls kaard is my favourite character (i used to like lancer)
Same
For those of you who may be wandering, the ye in "ye olde" is not ye at all, it's actually þe. Over time, Þ started looking more and more like a y, and when the printing press was brought to England, people opted to use the y instead of Þ. Btw, Þ is uppercase and þ is lowercase.
you could explain what sound it makes, idiot
Fantastic! We have similar pronouns when addressing one person in Russian ТЫ (ТИ in Ukrainian) and ВЫ ( ВИ in Ukrainian) when addressing many people or to show respect towards one person. It is interesting to note that in some Ukrainian families kids still address their parent using ВИ.
в этих языках куча слов родственных, но это не значит что английский произошел от славянского или наоборот, это подчеркивает что в древности был один индоевропейский язык.
например слово
Thu-ты
тhat-тот, эТОТ.
Flame-Пламя
матерь-mother
grab-ГРАБить(просто в русском языке поменялось значение, сюда по смыслу может подойти слово заГРЕБать)
Pray-ПРосить(но слово Pray это латинское заимствование, в и оно заместило исконно английское слово Fracgian, сравните с нынешнем немецким слово fragen(спрашивать) все эти слова pray, fracgian, просить-имеют общие корни.
Тын(забор)-Town(в древнеанглийском было такое слово как Tun, что означало частокол, или высокий забор)
День-day( в древнеанглийском писалось как daeg)
и таких слов тысячи
Well explained. It is hard to tell other european language speakers that there is no singular second person pronoun in English.
This video of thine taught me how to use these words.
Hell Girl: "I shall cleanse away thy bitterness".
IT sounds weird af lol
it seems thou hast to see a tvtorial of how to do such things, to bee able to speakest my language.
You don't just add -est to every other word. You only do that when conjugating a verb to the pronoun Thou. And the same goes for -eth for 3rd person.
"Dost thou go?" (Do you go)
"Thou doest go" (You do go)
@@ash_yt0 too complicated, el español es más fácil
Thou (subject, singular) Thee (object, singular)
Ye (subject, plural & respect) You (object, plural)
Thy (possessive adj, i.e. your) Thine (possessive pron, i.e. yours)
Thy strategically poetic weapon makes thou skill beneficial,thee art powerful
I have a question, (although I know this vid is old) I was wrtiimg a song in english (not my native tongue) and i came across a phonetical problem, I needed to find a word that kept the meaning of the phrase, rhymed with the lyrics prior and fit the melody, I figured that the word "Thee", though very archaic, did the job, plus in my native language we sometimes use somewhat archaic words if we need to rhyme and fit the lyrics into a melody, so to me it was no big deal. But I've NEVER heard an english song use "thee" as a pronoun, so I'm a bit on the fence if I should use it or not. (And I know music has poetic license to do whatever, bit I'm still lookimg for opinions.)
Definitely unusual
If there is ever a comment section in which it is appropriate for you to correct a strangers grammar it is this one.
Back then there was "no you"
great, best explanation bro
Now here's something I'm not sure about. Do we use "mine" and "thine" as "my" and "your" when the next noun starts with a vowel ? As in "Mine eyes, thine eyes."
Great video!!
How cool ! Thank you
Thanks to this guy I can mess with my classmates
What can I use to replace my, myself
Thank ypu so much. Very inforamative.
Þū --> thou. Then we used you. Come from you plural. jē (yē)
Why do we capitalize I and not me or my? It refers to the proper person.
Also, one way to distinguish when to or when not to say me such as in him and I instead of he and I or him and me or him and I, is to remove the him and see which one sounds correct, works every time.
In German we capitalize the formal and polite "you". For example: "Wir schicken Ihnen dieses Packet zurück" (We send You back this package), and the extinct "thou" would be the informal way to adress somebody like your friends, spouse or family. An example with Modern German and Early Modern English using thee and thou: "Markus, du hast schon wieder vergessen deine Hausaufgaben zu machen!!" ("Marcus, thou (you) hast (have) forgotten once again to do thy (your) homework!!") The integration of "do" has driven English away from German, as well, like the germans just say the verb and put some extra letters without saying "do" infront of it.
I is capitalized so it doesn’t get lost in text
ye used as polite form does not come from French, Low-Saxon spoken in Northern Germany has the exact same Ji Je and Jo used in a similar manner.
This video should be called How to speak fluent Rani
Whither dith he wend anon? = where did he go now?
Inflexions are only the second person and third person singular. All the rest are the same as common English( in verbs)
May the flames guide thee
I’m currently reading the divine comedy and i wonder what some of these words meant
Timeworks?
Thanks a lot! I'm from Argentina and Google doesn't do a good job translating those words to spanish.
So Luna from mlp made me come here
You're not alone. XD
Nice
in the beginning i honestly thought you were an ad and tried to skip
so from the 1450ad to behind It would be impossible to understand a "british" speaker?
SINGULAR
nom. thou
gen. thy, thine (before vowels)
dat. thee
acc. thee
poss. pron. thine
reflex./emph. thyself
PLURAL
nom. ye
gen. your
dat. you
acc. you
poss. pron. yours
reflex./emph. yourselves
SINGULAR
nom. I
gen. my, mine (before vowels)
dat. me
acc. me
poss. pron. mine
reflex./emph. myself
Note.
In Early Modern English, objective pronouns are used for reflexive use, e.g.
Now I lay me down to sleep.
Answer at 1:37
'Tis not hard to speak with thou, thee, thine and thy. Verily, I wish such were still in use atimes!
Bring it back!
It’s too bad. I’ll take all of thee’s and thou’s I can get. Particularly thee. There’s just something about that word that gets me.
The Quakers never used thou. Thee was used in every case rather than you or thou. I love that stuff. I love the way the Quakers used to use that and I wish they still did.
As in, I love thee. Thee is mine.
You is formal speech. The, thou thy etc. is familier. You use the familier with family and friends.
Suprisingly the familier is used in prayer. You are speaking to God as father.
Likewise you would use the familier with the Sovereign as father of the nation.
Ye is just the plural, not for use to kings. "Praise the Lord all ye peoples..."
If you want so say I love myself can I say I love thy self
Thy Punishment is DeAtH
-Minos Prime
Thanks dark soul 3
I will add "Yous" or "Youz" as an addition to "Y'all" (etc) as used in Scotland.
In Working-class (Bogan) Australian too "What are youse up to?" . But 'youse' is stigmatised as low class in Australia. In more general or neutral use 'you guys' is more acceptable.
Ye hath no friends so ye end up here
Bad Romance - Medieval Cover sends me here
Like Loveth Thou Me?
Just played Elden Ring and have to watch this to understand
I see a lot of comments saying "what am I doing here? English is not even my first language".
Then well done buddy! Now u can rub on people's faces u know advanced stuff in English when they don't even KNOW English to begin with
Wow it’s really amazing lesson
Is thy neck stiff?
25 years later... Thy still don't get it :)
What?
How to confuse Ireland
how do i say "your" to a group of people?
Thy ?
M.A.M 2000 group of people
M.A.M 2000 so its “your”
Xindopff your’st idk I’m just trying to be helpful...
Someone please tell me when Juliet said *Wherefore art thou Romeo??* This thing is pissing me as hell
MATE!!!..That was brilliant 🏆Propa-💎-Banter Geeza😎🕴🏿😎
In retrograde ONE thunk it appropriate to venture a retrospective appraisal of that t''was: accurate, informative and smile inducing... So much so - That one laugh, escaping off a well-endowed arse, shrieked a deadly parp, WHILE trying to buy drinks at a bar.😊.. 😂😂👏🏾👏🏾🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿🕴🏿Yes me brudda 👍🏾🎖👍🏾
Its Ab-sol-ute-ly good you know.....
😎😎👨🏾🎓👨🏼🎓👨🏾🎓😎😎
The arrow of dodona from the trials of apollo brought me here. 😂
Understandeth I Thee
'William the Bastard' is another cool name for him. lol
My family came into England with him.
WHY THE FUCK DOESN'T HE BLINK??????
In Texas "You" is singular/"Ya'll" is plural.
could we get the camera a little closer to his face?
Thou hast knew the path
Learning this cuz of Ranni 🤣
Must be nice to have a talent to be able to look at the camera and at the script at the same time.
I heard this from Dota 2’s Anti-Mage
Nymph and shepherd got me there.. 😅
Thou = singular subject you
Thee = singular object you
Thy = singular subject your
Thine = singular object yours
Ye = plural subject you
You = plural object you
Your = plural subject your
Yours = plural object your
Th = singular
Y = plural
I was never sure whether thou was pronounced similarly to you or more like how.
english is very funny language though... very limited words are there in english dictionary.. many words borrowed from latin... greek... sanskrit ... etc..etc...
Very good video! Next time though you should make sure you’re not in a cave system when you record your voice XD. Thanks for the explanation
thank thee
Why does he remind me of filthyfrank?
Now I can read the English bible!