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| Sysop: | Ray Quinn |
|---|---|
| Location: | Visalia, CA |
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How do you spell the subj in Canada? Th[ee] worst video?
The word "the" is an article and is correctly used in your
example. It is sometimes pronounced as "thee" when placed
before a vowel but the spelling doesn't change.
It seems to me I heard somewhere that in the US when a person wants
to emphasise the statement he uses "thee" even when a Canadian does
not. ;-)
Ah, here it is, thanx 2 Google:
https://youtu.be/gmy196ZbFCY?t=161
The word "thee" is a pronoun and is an "archaic or
dialect" (Oxford) way to say "you" when "you" is a
singular object It's an anachronism used mostly in
religious settings nowadays.
It seems to me I heard somewhere that in the US when a
person wants to emphasise the statement he uses "thee"
even when a Canadian does not. ;-)
The word "thee" is a pronoun and is an "archaic or dialect"
(Oxford) way to say "you" when "you" is a singular object It's an
anachronism used mostly in religious settings nowadays.
If by `object' thou meanest the objective case, then I agree with
thee.
The word "thee" is a pronoun and is an "archaic or
dialect" (Oxford) way to say "you" when "you" is a
singular object [...].
If by `object' thou meanest the objective case,
then I agree with thee.
The word "the" is an article and is correctly used in
your example. It is sometimes pronounced as "thee" when
before a vowel but the spelling doesn't change.
It seems to me I heard somewhere that in the US when a
person wants to emphasise the statement he uses "thee"
even when a Canadian does not. ;-)