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  • What is the difference between thee and thou?
    Thee, thou, and thine (or thy) are Early Modern English second person singular pronouns Thou is the subject form (nominative), thee is the object form, and thy thine is the possessive form Before they all merged into the catch-all form you, English second person pronouns distinguished between nominative and objective, as well as between singular and plural (or formal): thou - singular
  • grammar - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I am writing my own tales and poems and in those I often need to use the pronoun THOU, to mark clearly the difference between plural and singular second person There seems to be many intricacies and
  • Difference between willst and wilt in Shakespearean English?
    I am writing a scene from Macbeth detailing the battle before the play for my 11th-grade English class, and I decided to write it in Shakespearean for fun I have been trying to figure out the diff
  • Thou shalt not pass and You shall not pass hybrid
    Yes "You shalt not pass" and "Thou shall not pass" are as technically grammatically incorrect as sentences like "They is happy" or "It are good" would be That said, most people don't know how to use the grammar of "thou thee," "- (e)st" and "- (e)th" anyway The "modern" equivalent of Thou shalt not is You shall not (actually, shall is also old-fashioned, so really You will not or You must
  • Whats the difference between hundreds of thousands of and hundreds . . .
    The difference is that "hundreds of thousands of" means "at least 200,000", but probably more It's vague but huge (relatively), but "hundreds and thousands of" is illogical and semantically untenable If you say "Hundreds and thousands of protesters gathered in the square", you're obviously equivocating ("attempting to deceive") You can say that "Protesters came by the hundreds and thousands
  • Using hundreds to express thousands: why, where, when?
    The question title refers to expressing thousands using multiples of hundreds, like saying "twelve hundred" instead of "one thousand two hundred" This is somehow new to me I may have heard it, li
  • Shakespearean grammar: hath and has in the same sentence
    In Macbeth, Act I, Scene iii, after the encounter with the three witches, Banquo says, The earth hath bubbles as the water has, and these are of them What is the grammatical distinction between
  • What do you call a person who keeps on going despite setbacks? (in one . . .
    The word 'strever' (the equivalent of 'striver' in dutch) has a distinct negative connotation It's a person who tries really hard in terms of having good grades as a compensation for lack of social skills That's actually not a bad thing imo but it's used by people (usually teens) who try to lower the social status of socially inept people because they don't behave as they wish they'd do
  • meaning - How to use tens of and hundreds of? - English Language . . .
    In English, one would normally say "dozens of" rather than "tens of", so there is some overlap I might use "dozens of" for an amount between 36 (a dozen, two dozen, dozens ) and 132 (a dozen less than a gross), "scores of" for a number between 40 and 199, and "hundreds of" for values greater than that I don't think I've ever thought about the reasoning behind this; it would really depend
  • word choice - What differences are there between annually, yearly . . .
    Either annually or yearly can and frequently does replace ‘every year’ as none of the phrases is limited by the number of occurrences, except to the extent that what happens twice a year is strictly biannual, not twice annually There is no difference at all among ‘annually’, ‘yearly’ or 'every year' and Longmans and Oxford Online don’t think there is All their examples are





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