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Why the English-y sounding prayers?
Because we speak English?Why the English-y sounding prayers?
More helpful in determining if someone is refering to one person or a group of persons. And it sound good too!Why the English-y sounding prayers?
“Thee, thou, thy and thine” are the old personal, intimate forms in the English language used by families, friends and lovers.Examples:
Pax Vobiscum = The Lord be with you
“you” refering to more than one person, basically peace be with everyone
Pax Tecum = The Lord be with thee
“Thee” refers to only one person or peace be with one person.
Thou hast reversed the y-pronouns. “You” is objective case (as in thine example, “Peace be with you”, and “ye” is nominative case.Actually Thee’s Thou’s and Thy’s are very helpful:
What do they mean?
Thou = Second person Nominative Singular pronoun
You= Second person Nominative plural pronoun
Thee= Second person accusative singular pronoun
ye= Second person accusative plural pronoun
Examples:
Pax Vobiscum = The Lord be with you
“you” refering to more than one person, basically peace be with everyone
Ray Marshall said:“Thee, thou, thy and thine” are the old personal, intimate forms in the English language used by families, friends and lovers.
Who is closer to us than God?
Woops thanks for the correction.Thou hast reversed the y-pronouns. “You” is objective case (as in thine example, “Peace be with you”, and “ye” is nominative case.
This was the usage in pre-Elizabethan, pre-Shakespeare English. The usage of the th- pronouns as an indication of intimacy, pointed out by Ray Marshall, was the norm in Shakespeare’s writing. However, the practice in the KJV (and, I presume, the D-R) was to maintain the usage from previous English translations that were done at a time when the th/y distinction was singular/plural.
DaveBj
Mark 9:47–“If thine eye offend thee…” is nominative.Let me guess.
“thy” is used when modifying a nominative noun.
Matt. 1:20–"…fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife…" is objective (English doesn’t have an accusative case).“Thine” is used when modifying a accusative noun.
No takers, eh? Okay, here’s the answer.Here’s a trivia question–five phantom reputation points for the first right answer.
In Elizabethan English, when directly modifying a noun, when is “thy” used and when is “thine” used?
Now I can relate. Thanks.No takers, eh? Okay, here’s the answer.
Prof. Henry Higgins was trying to hard to get Eliza Doolittle to overcome (My Fair Lady was normal in the 16th-17th centuries.