The Disappearance (and Survival) of 'Thou'

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  • Опубликовано: 19 сен 2022
  • Blake, N. The Cambridge History of the English Language Vol II. 1992.
    A Devonshire dialogue: archive.org/details/adialogue...
    Another bit of Devonshire dialect: archive.org/details/jimandnel...
    The paper on the County Durham court transcripts: www.jstor.org/stable/43345931...
    The 1920s source on 'thee' in quaker speech: www.jstor.org/stable/452096#m...
    _____
    This channel's Patreon (thank you very much to anybody who donates): / simonroper

Комментарии • 782

  • @Rombik97
    @Rombik97 Год назад +111

    Very interesting, just wanted to point out that in NYorkshire & Teesside the following joke is still a thing:
    "Where's the bin?"
    "Oh, nowhere really, just the pub. Where's thou been?"

    • @dixgun
      @dixgun 5 месяцев назад +2

      👍

  • @DStecks
    @DStecks Год назад +222

    As a Canadian taught French from a young age, it blew my mind when I realized that "thou" was the English analogue to "tu", because the "thou became too informal or rude to ever use" theory also occurred to me then, and it struck me as a hilarious reversal that, in modern times, thee and thou are considered extremely formal or reverent entirely because the only places a modern English speaker is exposed to them are Shakespeare and the King James Bible.

    • @notvalidcharacters
      @notvalidcharacters Год назад +27

      Exactly. I can recall living in France and reading a bible in French for the first time, amazed to see God being referred to in the familiar form tu. From the English one had always assumed thou must be deferential, turns out to be the opposite.

    • @tjwhite1963
      @tjwhite1963 Год назад +6

      That's exactly right. I can attest that from my own religious experience in my youth.

    • @andreasmetzger7619
      @andreasmetzger7619 Год назад +15

      In German, God is also addressed informally with "Du"

    • @Ubu987
      @Ubu987 Год назад +18

      In the King James Bible and older hymns and prayers, 'thee' and 'thou' were deliberately used in the informal, familial, sense to address the Lord as a father, but the retention of this language today is intended in a reverent sense. One of those reversals that often happens in speech over time.

    • @cosettapessa6417
      @cosettapessa6417 Год назад +4

      @@andreasmetzger7619 italian too

  • @rvail136
    @rvail136 Год назад +464

    I'm a Ph.D in English Medieval History...and I deeply appreciate your videos. You delve into subjects I wish I had the time to do so. Thank you for your scolarship.

    • @sarahbailey6723
      @sarahbailey6723 Год назад +8

      What subjects do you delve into and is your delving publicly accessible in some form or other?

    • @patavinity1262
      @patavinity1262 Год назад +2

      If you're in the process of taking, or have already taken, a PhD in English medieval history, I'm not sure what excuse you have for not having 'delved into' a subject of such fundamental importance thus far. It's a bit pathetic really.

    • @sarahbailey6723
      @sarahbailey6723 Год назад +57

      @@patavinity1262 Are you always so harshly judgmental or do you reserve it strictly for time spent in RUclips comment sections?

    • @patavinity1262
      @patavinity1262 Год назад +2

      @@sarahbailey6723 I don't think the word 'judgmental' is very meaningful in this sense. If you mean to ask whether I'm always so critical or disparaging, I suppose that would differ depending on the context and my mood. I hope that satisfies your curiosity?

    • @sarahbailey6723
      @sarahbailey6723 Год назад +32

      @@patavinity1262 My curiosity is rarely satisfied, but that isn’t your fault.
      I suspect that were he to have earned a PhD in the history of Medieval English rather than English Medieval history, it would likely have come up, but for all I know his dissertation was on the fastenings of trebuchets or something equally esoteric and having little to do with language.
      I’m glad you view this to be of fundamental importance, but in the grand scheme of things (while I do find it to be interesting) I’m not sure that it is.
      And if your comment was actually meant ironically, I’m sorry that I missed it.

  • @lifewillseeyounow6550
    @lifewillseeyounow6550 Год назад +15

    I’m a roofer in the West Country and some of the old lads still say thou and thine. “ ‘aand me thine ‘ammer” is a something I hear every day. They also say “hark” for listen, call birds of prey raptors, say “where be to?” (Where are you) every time I call them on my phone. They say “cassent” instead of can’t sometimes which is a really odd one.

  • @jamestremlett9491
    @jamestremlett9491 Год назад +105

    My Mum was working a nurse in East Devon in the 1980s and she nursed patients - often farming folk - who still used thee, thy and thou. There’s also the Devon dialect word ‘thikky’ which means ‘that’ and is still used by a handful the older generation.

    • @Fenditokesdialect
      @Fenditokesdialect Год назад +10

      In William Barnes' poetry in Dorset dialect you find "thik" which is used for "that" when referring to a countable noun
      "we'll goo to vell thik tree down leäter on theäse a'ternoon"
      "We'll go to fell that tree down later on this afternoon".

    • @charliefarley1124
      @charliefarley1124 Год назад +12

      thicky or thiggy is still used by my husband who is a broad Devon speaker. so many other words too!

  • @ravenlord4
    @ravenlord4 Год назад +133

    Funny enough, many of my older relatives think of (and use) Thee and Thou as the more formal version, because they belong an orthodox Protestant church that still uses the King James Bible. They equate the words to be more "holy" or solemn I guess, kind of the exact opposite of the Quaker approach. I once tried to explain the irony of it to them, but they weren't having any of that, especially from a kid :)

    • @johnno.
      @johnno. Год назад +10

      Your older relatives sound based

    • @kevinjohnlancaster8333
      @kevinjohnlancaster8333 Год назад

      That was not the opposite of the Quaker approach, that was the Quaker approach. They thought themselves better than the rest of us, they still do. When they went on about "God's Elect" they meant themselves and f*** the rest of you

    • @letsnotgothere6242
      @letsnotgothere6242 Год назад +11

      Same. Thickheaded family😅don't tell them the name "Lucifer" in Isaiah is talking abt the king of Babylon and not Satan (the passage talks about how the king, a man, shall die)

    • @gsmiro
      @gsmiro Год назад +10

      The translators of the first English Bible Wycliffe uses thee and thou when God is speaking to us, because God is speaking to His children, so He would uses the informal forms of second person pronoun. But this fact may have been lost to some of the Christians, but not all. I read the KJV, even though some phrases maybe hard to understand, but it's not difficult just to take a few minutes to look up what it means. Also, to memorize verses in KJV is always more beautiful.

    • @ravenlord4
      @ravenlord4 Год назад +7

      @@gsmiro Same -- I find reading KJV similar to reading Shakespeare. It takes some extra effort, but it is easy to get used to, and it adds richness to the experience.

  • @chitlitlah
    @chitlitlah Год назад +29

    I made it one of my life goals to bring back thou. I've made zero progress whatsoever, but the hope is still alive.

    • @DanCooper404
      @DanCooper404 Год назад +6

      'Tis a worthy goal thou hast.

    • @tylere.8436
      @tylere.8436 Год назад +3

      Just read the KJV ad nauseam, 😛 thou shalt speak like that henceforth!

    • @ikbintom
      @ikbintom Год назад +3

      Yes thou canst!

    • @limmoblack
      @limmoblack Год назад +4

      I have often thought that if, say a rapper from Yorkshire, came out with 'olde English' lyrics, it would catch on, as in the film Clockwork Orange.

    • @douglascrystal3837
      @douglascrystal3837 Год назад +2

      I'm american and I use thee/thy with my little children, my parents used it with me, but I usually say 'thee is' 'thee was' instead of 'thou art'. Go for it THEE, nothing's stopping thee from saying it!

  • @SkeletonBill
    @SkeletonBill Год назад +34

    My great-great grandmother was born in the 1860s in rural Newfoundland, she lived into the 1950s and I was told that she used "thee" and "thou" in everyday speech. She would have been descended from West Country English immigrants from the late1700s, I believe.

    • @elimalinsky7069
      @elimalinsky7069 Год назад +4

      There is a common belief in the UK that thou and thee forms are still being actively used in remote pockets of the countryside in northern England, but I don't think that is actually true anymore, and perhaps only used among very elderly people, as in people around 95 years old and up.

  • @joyousmonkey6085
    @joyousmonkey6085 Год назад +78

    In my wife's Derbyshire dialect (sadly dying out) they still use a modified form of thou. Nom and Acc are both "thee" which is almost the same as modern RPA "they" - with a hint of the vowel sound in "eye". Unstressed Acc thee is "thi" which rhymes with "this" without the final s. If one enquires after someone's health, the phrase is "Aah dust thi seem in thi sen?" = How do you seem in yourself? (Seem is midway between "same" and the vowel sound in "chime".)
    One day my father-in-law watched me trying to clean out a sheep shed and remarked "If ah wuh thee ah wunna dow it." (If I were you I wouldn't do it.) "Dow" is midway between RPA "dough" and initial diphthong sound of RPA vowel in "cut".

    • @frankmitchell3594
      @frankmitchell3594 Год назад +3

      Interesting. I am from NE Leicestershire and I would have easily understood what was said. Maybe it is an East Midlands thing?

    • @ganjiblobflankis6581
      @ganjiblobflankis6581 Год назад +4

      It is used almost the same in Potteries. Derby and Stoke dialects are very similar (me duck/duck) anyway and mutually intelligible with a few vowel-shifts and different rhythms to them. It no longer has a "Talking down" sense and a person addressing you with thou derivatives implicitly invites you to reciprocate. It generally means mutual trust or someone about to ask for a favour.

    • @jellybebe2753
      @jellybebe2753 Год назад +4

      That is utterly delightful

    • @edwardmclaughlin7935
      @edwardmclaughlin7935 Год назад +3

      Joyous Monkey
      All of that is very like the everyday language of my Yorkshire grandparents.

    • @jonathandearden6815
      @jonathandearden6815 Год назад +1

      The language you describe is very similar if not the same to what my Grandparents used in South Yorkshire.

  • @advancedwatcher
    @advancedwatcher Год назад +264

    My grandad, born 1906 and raised in Sheffield, said his parents (born in the 1880s) used 'thou' and 'thee'. My mother (born 1934) also remembered her grandparents arguing, using 'thee'. And prawn cocktail crisps are always disgusting. Get well soon.

    • @henryluczak9156
      @henryluczak9156 Год назад +38

      I am originally from Doncaster and regularly heard locals use thee, thou and thy (possessive) in everyday speech. I worked with Sheffield natives 20 or 30 years ago and they used thee, thou and tha but the words thee and tha often sounded more like dee and da.

    • @fuckdefed
      @fuckdefed Год назад +20

      My dad grew up in Staffordshire and was born near there (actually in Derby hospital!) in 1948 but he doesn’t use these words. I’ve long been familiar with 2 phrases he taught me though:- “Thi cosna/cossnt/conna kick a bo agin a wo and yed it wi yed till thi bosses it” (you can’t kick a ball against a wall and head it with your head till you bust/burst it) and “thi conna tell me oat abaht eet cuz thi dunna know’st oat thisen”(you can’t tell me anything about it because you don’t know anything yourself). You’re wrong about prawn cocktail crisps though 🤤

    • @RichardOfYork1967
      @RichardOfYork1967 Год назад +22

      I'm from Sheffield and use thee , tha , and much less thine , it is disappearing fast though

    • @sarahbailey6723
      @sarahbailey6723 Год назад +6

      @@fuckdefed As an American, I’m intrigued by the thought of prawn cocktail crisps.
      Do they taste only of prawn, or also of sauce? We have a red tangy sauce here that we call cocktail sauce, but I have no idea if that’s a point of pan-Atlantic agreement. (In the US, there is no biscuit/cookie distinction. Yes, we’re savages, all of us. 🙃)
      Are these crisps potato-based or is some other food the main ingredient?
      Is the hue of the tasty dust sprinkled upon these crisps bright or subdued?

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 Год назад

      A biscuit is a big round muffin made of bread. As in: I bought a McDonalds biscuit sandwich

  • @authormichellefranklin
    @authormichellefranklin Год назад +107

    Sorry to hear about the plague. Hope you mend quickly! Stay well, Simon!

  • @mus0u
    @mus0u Год назад +70

    i'm a Quaker in the US. i was excited to hear you mention plain speech, which is now far from plain with respect to its social context! i have never personally met any Friend who still practices it. several of my elder Friends who attended meetings during their upbringings have attested that they knew people who did. the practices of each individual meeting can vary widely, so i get the sense that it primarily persists in regions like Pennsylvania where Quaker roots run deeper into the past. i am also not well-traveled, so my sample size consists only of 3 different weekly meetings and 2 different yearly meetings. (most meetinghouses are associated with a yearly meeting that convenes several individual meetings together.) the practice of plain speech is very common in our historical literature, so it's great to hear such an informed explanation on the linguistics of thou and thee! i'm sorry to hear of your bout with COVID. i hope you recover quickly. to use a Friendly expression, i will hold you in the Light, Simon!

    • @rckoala8838
      @rckoala8838 Год назад +4

      My father attended a Quaker school (Penn Charter) in the 1920s, and apparently some of the adults used "thee".

    • @glypnir
      @glypnir Год назад +4

      See my response that I just posted - I used thee with my family only growing up. Now my daughter uses you for singular and y'all for plural, which is the modern version that has evolved to fill the need.

    • @MCLooyverse
      @MCLooyverse Год назад +6

      @@glypnir I've also taken to a singular "you", and plural "y'all". The fact that some people are starting to use "y'all" as singular is an abomination.

    • @c.norbertneumann4986
      @c.norbertneumann4986 Год назад +1

      @@MCLooyverse I read somewhere that "y'all" is singular, and "all y'all" is plural.

    • @frankhooper7871
      @frankhooper7871 Год назад +2

      My experiences as an English Quaker correspond - I've not encountered anybody using thou/thee/thy - nor to my knowledge to any English Quakers refer to first-day, second-day etc.

  • @bendthebow
    @bendthebow Год назад +15

    There's a fun but in Moby Dick where our man Ishmael is talking to the Quaker owners of the whaling ship and he mimicks them saying thee/ thou. They stare at him not sure if he's mocking

  • @krisinsaigon
    @krisinsaigon Год назад +28

    I’m from Oldham and I grew up using “tha”/“thee” & which I guess is a variant of “thou”. I like it more than “you”, it sounds more natural and friendly. I like the way “me” and “thee” feel together, closer than “me “ and “you”, they feel like they jar together

    • @douglascrystal3837
      @douglascrystal3837 Год назад +7

      I agree with thee

    • @tankermottind
      @tankermottind Год назад +3

      Funny how in America, where it was never widely used outside of the Bible and Shakespeare, it is often seen as something very stiff and formal, like knights in fantasy throwing around thous and thees while commoners talk like random people from the 20th century (or some horrible "Cockney" eye dialect).

    • @krisinsaigon
      @krisinsaigon Год назад +1

      @@tankermottind interesting. In England I would say it’s a thing only “commoners” would ever say, and then only working class people from some areas of the country. To me ears it sounds about as informal as English can sound

    • @c.norbertneumann4986
      @c.norbertneumann4986 Год назад

      @@tankermottind Do we know how English colonists in America spole in the first half of the 17th century? If the thou-form was then still in use in England, it was likely in the English colonies in North America, too.

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 Год назад

      A total stranger on a train said to me the other day "I'm wasn't talking to you" meaning they were talking to someone but it wasn't me. I thought it sounded a bit rude to just use the word "you" in that way and wished another word existed for it.

  • @rikakemme
    @rikakemme Год назад +64

    My husband got covid just before christmas 2020. It affected his sense of smell and taste and he only recently declared that everything seems to be back to normal again. My point is, don't be too alarmed if your changed sense of taste persists for a long while. It can still get back to normal even after longer than a year.
    Get well soon. Love the video, as usual!

    • @simonroper9218
      @simonroper9218  Год назад +33

      Thank you for the warning :) It seems to have mostly gone back to normal, luckily. I'm glad to hear your husband's smelling normally again!

    • @CourtneySchwartz
      @CourtneySchwartz Год назад +6

      It can get worse before it gets better. For me, strong smells like mint were simply dull for 1.5 years, then suddenly onions smelled like cat pee.

    • @therealzilch
      @therealzilch Год назад +1

      It seems as though many post-Covid symptoms do go away with time. My sense of balance was compromised for about two months after my bout with Covid- I couldn't walk in a straight line with my eyes closed for the longest time. But I've got it back again. Patience.

  • @ChrisRamsbottom
    @ChrisRamsbottom Год назад +8

    Just discovered your channel Simon, wanted to comment on thee/thou. I'm a Black Country wench by upbringing and we still used thee and thou until the 70s: however that seemed to disappear with the advent of mass media, TV and radio. I moved to Barnsley in 1988 and lived there until 1999, and thee/thou was still in everyday usage then. Even now when I go back up there, my friends use them in my presence, things like "wass thaaaa wan?" (what do you want) and of course "Naaa den dee" (now then you).

  • @alanfbrookes9771
    @alanfbrookes9771 Год назад +16

    You omit the usage of 'ee, as in "I'll give 'ee some advice". There are several expressions in the Birmingham and Black Country areas that still use "thee", as in "I'll see thee anon".
    Those areas also frequently use "her" instead of "she", as in "Her was goin' home", which I see as a throwback to "heo".

    • @evan7391
      @evan7391 Год назад +2

      Correct me if I am wrong, however I believe that She developed directly from Hēo. Hēo became something Hyo or Hye (like in hue) and then Hy became Sh. Which gives us She. Her on the other hand came from Heora, which was the dative and genitive form of Hēo. I could be wrong, but this is the theory that makes the most sense to me.

    • @fuckdefed
      @fuckdefed Год назад

      I can’t say I’ve heard “I’ll see thee anon” in Birmingham, not unless consciously used in a joking mock-Shakespearean way of course.

    • @alanfbrookes9771
      @alanfbrookes9771 Год назад +2

      @@evan7391 I agree. I think the use of "her" in Brummy as the subject, rather than "she", comes from "heo", whereas "her" used correctly by those same people as the object, comes from "heora". In effect, they have two words now, both spelt "her".

    • @alanfbrookes9771
      @alanfbrookes9771 Год назад

      @@fuckdefed I don't know how old you are, but I've noticed that the Brummy accent has changed and smoothed out a lot compared to how my grandparents' generation, born in the 1880s, spoke. You don't here thick Brummy nowadays, probably because, as a giant conurbation, Birmingham has attracted people from other areas.

    • @fuckdefed
      @fuckdefed Год назад

      @@alanfbrookes9771 I was born in 1984, so maybe not old enough. My nan’s in her 90s and says ‘brock-you-low’ instead of ‘broccoli’ and I thought it was just a strange habit of hers but I did hear one other old Brummie on an episode on ‘Come Dine With Me’ say it in the same way, so it might be a nearly obsolete dialect pronunciation. Have you ever heard ‘broccoli’ said that way?

  • @jordankobalt520
    @jordankobalt520 Год назад +8

    The most honest, no-bullshit channel on RUclips. Can't get enough.

  • @susanchappell796
    @susanchappell796 Год назад +6

    Hello from Texas. Thank You Simon. Speedy recovery to be able to enjoy your crisps.

  • @Fummy007
    @Fummy007 Год назад +30

    My dad is from West Yorkshire and only once in my life (when he was talking to his sister) did I hear him say "me and thee" instead of "we". It was in an affectionate context and I think he just slipped into a bit of dialect.

    • @douglascrystal3837
      @douglascrystal3837 Год назад +5

      I'm american and I occasionally say "me and thee", it's a more cheeky way of saying "you and I"

  • @postscript67
    @postscript67 Год назад +8

    As others have commented, Shetland dialect still commonly uses du, dee, dy, dine. In Orkney when I was a child in the 1970s I remember my father (born 1925) and his relatives from one of the smaller islands all using thoo, thee, thine, but only when speaking among themselves. He never spoke to me or anyone else like that, nor did my mother (from a rural parish on the mainland (i.e. main island)) speak like that, and people in Kirkwall, the county town, did not speak like that either.

  • @stephenbenner4353
    @stephenbenner4353 Год назад +22

    In Thomas Hardy’s under the greenwood tree, a girl getting married admonishes her father not to use the word “thou” at her wedding because it is old fashioned. Maybe in some contexts, the language was actively changed by a younger generation.

    • @douglascrystal3837
      @douglascrystal3837 Год назад

      I thee my father sometimes, I'm not too religious but he understands it from a religious perspective and HE HATES IT... therefore I logically keep thee'ing him. I guess it's my way of jabbing his ribs and playing with him?

    • @jonstfrancis
      @jonstfrancis Год назад +2

      I've read that book and wondered if Simon would mention that. Does seem that shaming speakers was part of the reason for change at least at a later date. Not sure if it was so much that she was younger though but more that she was educated and embarrassed at her father seeming uncouth? I could be wrong however or maybe it more-or-less amounts to the same thing?

    • @jonstfrancis
      @jonstfrancis Год назад +1

      Maybe of interest, there is also an example of language shaming in The Mayor of Casterbridge where the 'trumped up' mayor chastises his daughter for saying "bide where you be".

  • @maryclark2898
    @maryclark2898 Год назад +2

    I am 62 now and my father was Quaker. In the late 70's I visited a friend's family in Indiana. They were all Quakers, indeed most of the town was. They still used the thee form within the family and the town. It was used in both nominative and accusative; "is thee going to the store?" was a question I heard. However they used the you form with people not part of the Society of Friends. I found it interesting that something that had been originally intended to make everyone equal had evolved away from that.

  • @zekharye1
    @zekharye1 Год назад +13

    In an early scene in “The Philadelphia Story,” James Stewart’s character finds himself being thee’d and thou’d by a suburban librarian. (Pennsylvania was famously settled by Quakers, among others.) To which he responded, “Dost thou have a washroom?”

  • @douglasgrant2190
    @douglasgrant2190 Год назад +20

    I hope your illness passes easily. And here in the US, Quakers still use Thou and occasionally Thee.

  • @MrMmorganlnwr
    @MrMmorganlnwr Год назад

    Most informative as ever and at a difficult time, my best wishes for a speedy recovery

  • @yan_tastic8078
    @yan_tastic8078 Год назад +13

    Hi Simon, I can confirm that in Durham, "thou" is still used. Interestingly you will also hear it as "thous" meaning, "you have". Additionally, on Wearside "ye" is still used for "you". Something to look into?

    • @multi-purposebiped7419
      @multi-purposebiped7419 Год назад

      I worked in Sunderland (North Hylton area but that's irrelevant) some 50 years ago. Even though I lived no more than 20 miles south of there, I had some problems understanding people speaking socially among themselves. I kept hearing the phrase "thoos mak'n gam" and in the end I had to admit defeat and ask what it was. It was "You're making game" (you're pulling my leg).

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 Год назад

      What percentage of people use those words?

  • @leod-sigefast
    @leod-sigefast Год назад +19

    I got covid in July, after 2 years giving it the slip...during the bloody hottest temperatures I have ever known in the UK! I lost my sense of smell for 3 weeks and it was really disconcerting. It was like someone turned a dimmer switch right down in my nose/brain. Fortunately, no taste loss or change. The first 3-4 days were really horrible, feeling feverish. Get well soon Simon!

  • @andrewlawrence990
    @andrewlawrence990 Год назад

    Just wonderful! I so enjoy your videos. Thank you.

  • @epsdudez
    @epsdudez Год назад +9

    The loss of the thou/thee/ye/you distinction is one of English's greatest pities in my judgement. I vote we bring it back.

    • @cogitoergosum9069
      @cogitoergosum9069 Год назад +3

      If you mean the distinction between singular and plural in the second person, I 💯 agree with you. However, if you mean the T-V distinction, I strongly disagree; I very much appreciate the egalitarianism of English pronouns.

    • @c.norbertneumann4986
      @c.norbertneumann4986 Год назад +1

      @@cogitoergosum9069 Addressing a single person with "you" is T-V distinction.

    • @cogitoergosum9069
      @cogitoergosum9069 Год назад +3

      @@c.norbertneumann4986 No, a T-V distinction is the use of a different set of pronouns to convey formality/politeness/familiarity (e.g. Spanish _usted_ vs _tú_ and _ustedes_ vs _vosotros_ ).

    • @tylere.8436
      @tylere.8436 Год назад +1

      @@cogitoergosum9069 Technically, usted derives from a Late Latin honorific title, vostra merces - grammatically third person, treated like 2nd person. I get your point, just wanted to add that since it was a different development.

    • @tylere.8436
      @tylere.8436 Год назад +2

      @@cogitoergosum9069 Using thou then you would be easier and simpler than saying you then- you all, yous, you guys, y'all, etc. So clumsy. 😖

  • @michaljanwarecki763
    @michaljanwarecki763 Год назад

    Thank you for providing such interesting content. I hope you'll get better soon!

  • @robbicu
    @robbicu Год назад +1

    I always enjoy your take on the evolution of words and phrases. Thank you, well done!

  • @chrissmith6936
    @chrissmith6936 Год назад

    Your vids are always interesting, keep them coming.

  • @c.norbertneumann4986
    @c.norbertneumann4986 Год назад +3

    Simon mentions Jacques Bellot's "Familiar dialogues" (1586). The book was written to teach Huguenot refugees from France everyday English. This book includes a dialogue between three schoolchildren and their nanny before they go to school. In this dialog, they constantly address each other with "you", and not a single time with "thou". This seems to give evidence that "thou" had completely fallen out of use at the end of the 16th century, even within the family and among children. The book was directed to adult refugees who didn't go to school any more. Those refugees were to be taught how to have conversation with native adults, for example when shopping at the market. In such situations, it was obligatory to use the polite you-form. When at home, the Huguenot refugees would have spoken among each other (and to their children) in French language. Maybe Bellot considered it abundant to teach the French refugees the thou-form which they wouldn't use at all anyway. This does not necessarily mean the fiorm didn't exist any more in spoken contemporary English.
    P.S.: By the way, it is very interesting to read Bellot's dialogues, since Bellot transcribes the written English into a pronounced form. So we get a picture of English pronunciation in London in 1586. For example, the pronunciation of the sentence "Peter, where layde you your nightcap?" is denounced: "Piter, houer led you yor neict kep". This shows that the "h" in "where" was still spoken at the beginning of the word, as was the case with the gh-sound in "night". The diphtong in "night" was pronounced else than it is today. To form questions with"to do" as auxiliary verb was not obligatory yet.

  • @Anbregour
    @Anbregour Год назад +3

    I'm from the West Riding. I'm only in my early twenties, but I still regularly use 'tha' and less often 'thee' in informal language. "How'st tha bin?" as opposed to "How have you been?" for instance. Or "Did I give it thee?" instead of "Did I give it to you?".

  • @annipetratos9401
    @annipetratos9401 Год назад +1

    Thankyou for video, hope you feel better quickly

  • @stephanieparker1250
    @stephanieparker1250 Год назад

    I’ve really enjoyed your videos! I love hearing your thoughts on various topics as well. 🙌 I hope your feeling better! ❤

  • @Dennizon1
    @Dennizon1 Год назад +7

    Fascinating. Can confirm that in the Dales an old boy, perhaps now only in drink, might say "if thou has any more pups out of that dog of thine, I want one". Or "hast tha' done it?"would still be commonly said

  • @moxiebombshell
    @moxiebombshell Год назад

    I'm so glad I stumbled across your videos again! I'll be subscribing this time so I won't miss out any more.

  • @debbiet5130
    @debbiet5130 Год назад

    Really interesting - thanks very much! And hope you are feeling fully recovered soon😊

  • @rachel_Cochran
    @rachel_Cochran Год назад

    Love this video, thank you

  • @connormccloy9399
    @connormccloy9399 Год назад +1

    Thank you Simon!

  • @zhopaaesthetic
    @zhopaaesthetic Год назад

    Thanks a lot for this wonderful video, I have been wondering about this for the longest time!
    I also have to say that your choice of the background colour is amazing - beautiful light cocoa shade, very soothing.

  • @richardh8082
    @richardh8082 Год назад

    Recently come back to your channel. Really happy :)

  • @katherineatkinson1899
    @katherineatkinson1899 Год назад +14

    I’ve been living in Sheffield for 15 years. At some point since moving here I have heard that people from surrounding towns such as Rotherham and Barnsley, refer to people from Sheffield as Dee-Dars. This is because they think people in Sheffield pronounce thee and tha as dee and da. If correct this does suggest a form of thou does still persist in South Yorkshire.

    • @PWFSeattle
      @PWFSeattle Год назад +2

      Interesting - my mother (from Kent) used to refer to people who were pretentious or putting on airs as "la di da". You make me think that the "di-da" must originally have been an imitative reference to their use of "thee-tha". But where would the "la" have come from?

    • @tonyf9984
      @tonyf9984 Год назад +4

      @@PWFSeattle The etymology I once encountered was quite different: a variant on 'lardy-dardy', an example of reduplication, where the first word carries the meaning and the second just emphasises it with a rhyme. In this case 'lardy' is/was thought to be a corruption of 'lord(y)', which makes sense, given its connotations of upper-class poshness ... If you're not convinced by this super-duper explanation, try googling a better one!

  • @Emox991
    @Emox991 Год назад

    Happy to hear from you again 😁

  • @kenning8999
    @kenning8999 Год назад

    You're an artist Simon. Really. You give me hope.

  • @alvoi4379
    @alvoi4379 Год назад +2

    I hope you recover soon Simon! Great video as always ❤

  • @MikeS29
    @MikeS29 Год назад +1

    Much appreciated, great video! Feel better.

  • @manof2moro
    @manof2moro Год назад +20

    Your videos are always so interesting. Keep up the good work!

  • @gary.h.turner
    @gary.h.turner Год назад +8

    Could we have a video about when and how the 3rd-person conjugation of verbs changed from -eth to -s (e.g. "thinketh" to "thinks"), and why this happened?

  • @michael.ringo.snyder
    @michael.ringo.snyder Год назад

    Get well soon, glad to see another video!

  • @emcarnahan
    @emcarnahan Год назад +3

    Nice camera work! Good choice on the zoomed-in view ☺️ Interesting and informative/intriguing as ever

  • @awhooley
    @awhooley Год назад +1

    You have made a fantastic video regarding this. I am currently studying German (B2) and these topics make learning more fun, relatable and easier to remember. Thanks Simon!

  • @Fenditokesdialect
    @Fenditokesdialect Год назад +42

    13:20: little note here Simon, the form [ðɐː] as you write it (though I personally would write it [ða]) is used only in the West Riding of Yorkshire since West Riding speech is essentially Midlands speech that moved north and so doesn't have the largely unshifted realisation of the House vowel kept from Middle English like truly Northern dialects such as Cumbrian or the North and East Riding Yorkshire dialects.
    To take the sentence at 13:13 to compare a "typical" version of North and West Yorkshire dialect it'd be written something like this in traditional orthography:
    In WR speech: naa, yor top-stooans is t'stooans at tha can't wall i t'wall when tha's/th'art wallin up.
    And in NR speech: noo, yor top-steeans is t'steeans at thoo can't wall when thoo's wallin up.
    Another note is that h-dropping is systematic in West Riding dialect so "haase" would be /a:s/.

    • @highgroundproductions8590
      @highgroundproductions8590 Год назад +1

      I refuse to call that English. It's not mutually intelligible with standard english.

    • @EdwardAveyard
      @EdwardAveyard Год назад +8

      @@highgroundproductions8590 On that basis, there's a hell of a lot of different languages in the world.

    • @EdwardAveyard
      @EdwardAveyard Год назад +1

      This is all correct, except that I'd query the reason for linking this to being "essentially Midlands speech". Does anywhere south of Cheshire use ða in its traditional dialects?

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 Год назад +1

      If you can understand it, then it’s the same language you speak

    • @Fenditokesdialect
      @Fenditokesdialect Год назад +1

      @@EdwardAveyard in Derbyshire dialect from Castleton area it'd be "nah, yor top-stooans is t'stooans as tha cosna waw when th'art wawin up"
      In Stokie dialect: "nye, yor top-stones is th'stones as tha cosna wow when th'art wowin up"

  • @antonshidlovsky5579
    @antonshidlovsky5579 Год назад

    Get well, sir, and thanks for the video!

  • @IndigoSpades
    @IndigoSpades Год назад +11

    What a lovely surprise to hear you mention Alex Turner in one of your videos!
    I've always felt that he was a great writer and noticed certain slang or jargon in his songs which always intrigue.
    Quite strange to have this small overlap in such strong interests of mine.
    Hope you're enjoying the new single if you're a fan, Simon.

  • @frank327
    @frank327 Год назад

    Brilliant. Perfect summation.

  • @DaveTexas
    @DaveTexas Год назад +3

    As always, a fascinating video. I’ve always thought of "thee" and "thou" as just being the English version of "du" from German, but you’ve brilliantly shown how the path to "thee," "thou," and "you" is far more complicated. Great work!

  • @joriaancollombon6938
    @joriaancollombon6938 Год назад +10

    As a native dutch speaker, I can‘t help but notice how similar the vowel qualities of the spoken voice recordings of the Orton survey seem to certain dutch dialects in the northeast of the netherlands. Really interesting!

    • @winifsan3873
      @winifsan3873 Год назад

      Me too, I found them strikingly similar to Frisian mostly.

    • @lukeueda-sarson6732
      @lukeueda-sarson6732 Год назад

      @@winifsan3873 I have read that Frisian and Northumbrian fishermen could still understand each other at a reasonable level at the close of the 19th century if they ever met over the Dogger Bank.

  • @PaulSmyth
    @PaulSmyth Год назад +22

    My Grandmother was from Ashton under Lyne in what was then Lancashire, born in 1914. Thou evolved into tha and she used it and thee until the end of her life in 1991. Examples "tha'd better get going or tha'll be late" or "where's tha been".
    Thee tended to be used in words like "thee-sel" for yourself (thi-sen in Yorkshire).
    I still use both occasionally as do many here in Manchester. Certainly those in Lancashire towns

    • @PaulSmyth
      @PaulSmyth Год назад +1

      Oh yeah, other uses of thee still in use "I'll give thee a crack" "Is thee reet" (are you alright). "I'll see thee" (see you later).

    • @anglosaxon4571
      @anglosaxon4571 Год назад +8

      My family is from Yorkshire and we say thi-sen a lot to each other as well as both thou and tha depending on context example thou art a jammy buggar.

    • @PaulSmyth
      @PaulSmyth Год назад +5

      @@anglosaxon4571 I've heard that. In Lancashire "thou is" is shortened to "tha's". Another classic Manchester/Lancashire phrase "Tha'd never stop a pig in a ginnel" meaning someone was bandy legged

    • @PaulSmyth
      @PaulSmyth Год назад +5

      @@anglosaxon4571 My favourite Yorkshire saying:
      Hear all, see all, say nowt.
      Eat all, sup all, pay nowt.
      And if ever thou does owt for nowt
      Make sure thou does it for thi-sen

    • @aidancowell9953
      @aidancowell9953 Год назад +3

      my Granddad was born in Brierfield, near Burnley in the mid 1940s and he says things like "tha'll be late" or "where's tha been". He also says "coat" like "coit" and "cook, book and look" sound like the name "Luke". I'm a Londoner born and bred so, I could never tell whether it was "put on" or whether that's just how his generation sounded.

  • @ThePeanutGiant
    @ThePeanutGiant Год назад +1

    Hello from something like 8000 km away Simon! RUclips every now and then will recommend me gems, one of which has been your channel. Having subbed and watched a few of your videos now, I am hooked. I wish you continued health and well-being, if only so we can continue to get videos. I joke! Best

  • @stevenmontoya9950
    @stevenmontoya9950 Год назад +6

    After two years of evading the virus, I tested positive for it about a month and a half ago. I only had a fever and a nagging dry cough for a only few days, but I kept testing positive for two whole weeks afterwards. Quite stubborn that virus was for me, and I'm glad no senses were affected. Glad to hear you're on the mend!

  • @enrott8560
    @enrott8560 Год назад

    I haven't gotten a single video notification from ur channel even though I've subscribed

  • @DeactivatedAlmonds
    @DeactivatedAlmonds Год назад

    This video was incredible

  • @paulhwbooth
    @paulhwbooth Год назад

    Excellent, Mr Roper. Get well soon.

  • @Christina_Paz
    @Christina_Paz Год назад +2

    Great use of the camera, both in the scenery as well as you speaking.

  • @techElephant
    @techElephant Год назад

    wonderful - thank you!

  • @nigelsouthworth5577
    @nigelsouthworth5577 Год назад

    Wonderful, thanks

  • @KC-to9xl
    @KC-to9xl Год назад

    I absolutely love this content

    • @MikJFr
      @MikJFr Год назад

      Digressing into the T-V distinction in other languages, I've always been struck by the awkwardness of Polish (which I know slightly), where the polite form requires the use of "Pan" (="Sir") + third-person singular. I.e, to say "Do you agree?" you have to say/write "Does Sir agree?", including capitalisation.

  • @archiproty
    @archiproty Год назад +4

    The words of the song in Yorkshire dialect, "On Ilka moor baht 'at' - ' Where hast tha bin sin I saw thee?'

  • @CaraLiebe
    @CaraLiebe Год назад +1

    Truly enjoy your really interesting and educational videos. Keep up the great work. I think it's really fun to notice connections between different languages throughout history. For example, a few years ago in Iceland, we were hiking and came across a trail map with a locator labeled "Pu ert her" ("You are here"....not sure how to do the accent marks on my keyboard), and it seems that it sounds a lot like the Middle (?) English "Thou art (here)". Makes sense since Icelandic and English are both Germanic.

  • @rexmundi3108
    @rexmundi3108 Год назад

    Considering what you do, I'm often confused when I get excited when you post. But I do.

  • @floopyboimcgee4174
    @floopyboimcgee4174 Год назад +3

    My South-West County Durham dialect still sometimes uses thou as in both "thoo" (as in flew) and "thow" (as in plough), which is used by my mother and was used by my grandparents, it's pretty much dead now outside of my nerdy way of wanting to keep it alive.

  • @RichardOfYork1967
    @RichardOfYork1967 Год назад

    Thanks for this video it was just what I wanted explaining , tha did well

  • @malcolmsepulchre7713
    @malcolmsepulchre7713 Год назад +6

    Thanks for the video Simon: 2nd-person pronoun evolution (or more specifically T-V distinctions) is one of my pet topics and I'm always happy when someone can teach me something I didn't know about it.
    I'd say there's good reason to think that the singular form had come to be perceived as rude at least by some in 16th century London. In one of Erasmus' letters, he shares a story from a German doctor friend of his who'd lived and practiced in England. This doctor was confronting a prior patient who was refusing to pay him, clearly an educated patient since their conversation was in Latin. When the doctor got a bit worked up and addressed the patient as "tu" in Latin, the patient took offence and said, "Vah! Homo Germanus tuissas Anglum?" (Och! Thou, a German, thou Thou'st an Englishman?) Of course, that doesn't tell us anything about usage in English directly, but if this guy felt like the singular in Latin was some kind of grave insult, that might give us a hint as to how the difference between Thou and You was perceived at the time.

  • @jcfw
    @jcfw Год назад +8

    I am originally from Sheffield and my late mother (b. 1932) always used thee and tha in her daily speech. She was from a mining village just outside Sheffield. People still use thee and tha at football matches in their chants e.g "Tha's gonna get tha (expletive deleted) head kicked in!"

    • @douglascrystal3837
      @douglascrystal3837 Год назад +1

      I'm american and I seem to speak thee in the same manner as the yorkshire people, "thee is" "thee was" not "thou art", but hearing yall say it, yall sound so different from us, I sometimes say to my little children "tha gotta get thy coat!", I don't think brits say "tha gotta", maybe "tha have got to"? Also "tha gotta" is said more like "tha godda" in the glorious ridiculous american pronunciation! hahahaha

    • @bugwar
      @bugwar Год назад

      @@douglascrystal3837 "Thas gorra get thee coat." Is how I'd have said it in North Sheffield as a kid. "Daz gorra get dee coaht" if more central Sheffield.

  • @QuelquefoisFois
    @QuelquefoisFois Год назад +3

    The 1980 song Upside Down by Diana Ross features her singing "I say to thee respectfully". 😊

  • @tahiti1
    @tahiti1 Год назад +2

    Fascinating video. My dad (1922-2014) (and his family from E. Yorks) all used "thee" and "thou" and "ye". As a Brit currently in Argentina using "vos" for you singular in Spanish it is fascinating to know that "vos" may have once been used in this way in England too!!

  • @thoughtfox12
    @thoughtfox12 Год назад

    terrific video

  • @luminair11
    @luminair11 Год назад

    Fascinated by the history of the English language! Wishing you a good recovery.....take good care of yourself!

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch Год назад

    Wonderful as usual. I went through this transition when I came to Austria in '82 and realized the connection between "thou" and German "du". Lots of themes and subthemes here.
    Lunch is on me if you're ever in town. Cheers from cloudy Vienna, Scott

  • @dzonbrodi514
    @dzonbrodi514 Год назад

    Get well soon.
    Interesting video.

  • @rckoala8838
    @rckoala8838 Год назад

    I seem to recall that prawn cocktail crisps taste much better than they sound. Hope your recovery is quick! Always a pleasure to hear your insights.

  • @eruantien9932
    @eruantien9932 Год назад +1

    West Riding, late 20's; I don't have much of a Yorkshire accent due to my dad's side of the family moving around a lot (grandfather was RAF), and my mum being from Bucks, but there are bits of dialect that I use frequently, notably "tha" and "thi". Basically nominative and accusative "you". And I'm not the only one around this neck of the woods to do so.
    Generally I only use them in informal speach, and not even all of the time, but they definately show up; off the top of my head, "tha's" in place of "you're" happens frequently in my informal speach, and "see you" become "si thi". Oh, and if someone says/does something dumb, my "you're having a laugh, aren't/ain't you" is frequently "tha's avin a laugh, in't thi".
    So "thee" and "thou" are stil alive, even with younger generations, in some parts of the world.

  • @OdoDeBayeux
    @OdoDeBayeux Год назад

    I've never commented to anyone about anything on RUclips, so first off may I say I'm a Big Fan of yours (though taciturn). I've been recovering from Covid since last week, so I can relate - though my taste buds seems OK. But more importantly, having grown up English-dominant bilingual (my mother is French), I've always thought (in a rather undisciplined kind of way) that the French tu / vous "business" is somehow connected, if not "responsible", for the English thou / you "peculiarity" (for lack of a better word). Glad to hear your take on that, which somehow suggests I'm not totally off my rocker! And by the way - you rock!

  • @paulduffitt7338
    @paulduffitt7338 Год назад

    I'm from Pudsey in Yorkshire and when my Dad was an apprentice in the early 1950s he was told off by his boss for being too familiar with his superior/elder..
    "Don't thee thou me lad", he was told!
    Love the channel.
    Cheers

  • @DaGizmoGuy
    @DaGizmoGuy Год назад +4

    In Shetland we have _du_ /du/ and _dee_ /di/ which both hold strong today even for younger speakers in the country. We have the _I spaek/du spaeks/you spaek/(he/shø/it/hit) spaeks_ inflection as well.

  • @JoseNelisParham
    @JoseNelisParham Год назад

    Super interesting thanks.

  • @blotski
    @blotski Год назад +2

    I'll never forget as a student teacher in 1980 I arrived at my first school placement in a village near Doncaster and a boy looking me up and down and asking 'Is tha a teacher?'

  • @Marcus51090
    @Marcus51090 Год назад

    I have no idea why, but I like just listening to you talk about random stuff, not even about languages etc
    You have a fascination about you

  • @rh645
    @rh645 Год назад +3

    Love all your yoitube teachings fella!. I lived in a place between sunderland and durham for a while. 'Thoo' and 'yay' ('a' like play in northern sound), were both the most common words for 'you'. 'Thine' means yours. Older people there say 'thou'. As well as many other older english/scottish pronunciations, or somewhere in between, still in use in informal conversation. Your lesson on ye and the recently, shed some light on the y and th sound interchanging. Hope you recover from covid quickly. I had the same taste issue with it at xmas, so stopped drinking pricy special beers until it started to fade away gradually around a month later. Looking forward to your next vid. Cheers!

    • @flannerypedley840
      @flannerypedley840 Год назад +1

      wow, you have just dredged up a childhood memory of mine. Watching and reading this, I thought I had known some people who certainly said "thine" and mabye more others, but I couldn't place it. Now I have been struck by figurative lightning. They were an elderly group of people from Bishop Auckland.

    • @rh645
      @rh645 Год назад

      @@flannerypedley840yes i'd expect they say that down in Bishop. I was raised 3 mile west of durham city and southern durham accents like bishop, sounded a tad Teesside or N. Yorkshire to me, though still using most of our more geordie slang words (though we have a very noticable difference (locally i guess) between us and newcastle for most pronunciations

  • @VioleRose100
    @VioleRose100 Год назад +3

    I know nothing about Old English, but your delivery is fascinating

    • @benkolya
      @benkolya Год назад +3

      I'm exactly the same after being subscribed for a couple years 🤣

    • @VioleRose100
      @VioleRose100 Год назад +1

      @@benkolya
      Lol , you need a toddler head, they catch languages like a bro in few months.

  • @TheRealMagicBananaz
    @TheRealMagicBananaz Год назад +2

    I'm from rural Missouri, typically the only exposure we regularly have to Thou and Thee (other than Shakespeare) is the Bible. I'm frankly quite surprised to hear that they were still (and still may be) in use as recently as the 20th century. I often wonder how diverse the language will be a century from now. Always love your videos Simon, it's scholars such as yourself that really push forward the intrigue of science and history in our modern era

  • @kmscheid3303
    @kmscheid3303 Год назад +1

    thank you!!! for brief and CLEAR explanations of these cases. I've been studying Russian and I am lost. Thanks!!!

    • @dmitrykazakov2829
      @dmitrykazakov2829 Год назад +1

      There are six forms in total [mess 😩]:
      ты - It's you [Nominative]
      тебя - I accuse you [Accusative]
      тебе - I give it to you [Dative]
      тебя - I am proud of you [Genitive]
      тобой - It is made by you [Instrumental]
      тебе - I am talking about you [Prepositional]

    • @kmscheid3303
      @kmscheid3303 Год назад

      ​@@dmitrykazakov2829 Thank you so very much! Now I can make sense of it, rather than guessing. Thank you!

  • @joebombero1
    @joebombero1 Месяц назад

    I was always taught to use thou and thee when reciting the rosary, specifically the Hail Mary prayer.
    Hail Mary full of grace
    The Lord is with thee
    Blessed art thou amongst women
    And blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus
    Holy Mary mother of God & etc.
    Having retired to the Philippines I discovered English speakers here use some of the forms of thee and thou, but not others, so I have had several informal classes teaching fellow devotees the proper use of the grammar.
    I find it interesting I am continuing the use of these archaic words.

  • @lovingdevotions
    @lovingdevotions Год назад

    Thank you

  • @livmarlin4259
    @livmarlin4259 Год назад +3

    How great thou art.

  • @talitek
    @talitek Год назад +23

    I've recently been learning more about my own legacy dialect, Wiltshire English, and from the literature I've read it seems like thou/thee survived until very recently even here, though mostly with thee having supplanted the nominative form. I so wish I could have been alive to hear that part of the dialect!
    I'm also aware that the traditional third person masculine pronoun was he/hin, not he/him. I think I might still occasionally hear that one, if only in reduced form (I saw them talkin' to 'n).

    • @anthonyhearn6886
      @anthonyhearn6886 Год назад +1

      "it" was a 15th century innovation, apparently, and several dialects (including the West Country and my native Suffolk) knew nothing of it. In the West of England dialects (and no doubt elsewhere) the reduced 'accusative' case is /'un/ (from Middle English /hine/), as in "Give 'un yer".

    • @Fenditokesdialect
      @Fenditokesdialect Год назад

      @@anthonyhearn6886 they do you plonker, it's just that it is used only to refer to uncountable nouns, the masculine pronouns are used to refer to countable nouns. As such in Dorset dialect "the house be a-miade o' stwone -> "the house be a-miade o't" BUT "I picked the stwone up" -> "I picked en up".
      "It" has cognates in other germanic languages away from Old English descendants, West Frisian "it", Dutch "het", German "es"... So to say it's a 15th century innovation is preposterous

    • @anthonyhearn6886
      @anthonyhearn6886 Год назад

      @@Fenditokesdialect I think you misunderstand me. The neuter pronoun was uncommon and is possessive 'its' was the innovation ('his' until the 15th century). I am not sure 'plonker' is helpful!

    • @Fenditokesdialect
      @Fenditokesdialect Год назад

      @@anthonyhearn6886 but that's not the original meaning of the comment you gave, I'm aware of the formation from it+'s, in fact in a lot of Northern dialects where 's is optional its is reduced to it. In the Cumbrian poem Simon did a recording of you get the line "an' t'leet iv it' ee was green glentin low, iv it' ee we mud say for it nobbut hed yan"

  • @yosefkerman8451
    @yosefkerman8451 10 месяцев назад

    I find your videos really informative!
    I thought it was interesting that you mentioned Old English merged "thech" and "thee" about 1000 years ago, since many Yiddish dialects are merging their cognates "dich" and "dir" today.