Thee /ði/ Show Spelled[thee] pronoun
1. The objective case of thou: With this ring, I thee wed. I shall bring thee a mighty army.
Origin: before 900; Middle English; Old English thē (orig. dative; later dative and accusative); cognate with Low German di, German dir, Old Norse thēr. See thou
Thou /ðaʊ/ Show Spelled [thou] pronoun, singular, nominative thou; possessive thy or thine; objective thee; plural, nominative you or ye;possessive your or yours;objective you or ye; verb
pronoun
1.Archaic. The personal pronoun of the second person singular in the nominative case (used to denote the person or thing addressed): Thou shalt not kill.
Origin: before 900; Middle English; Old English thū; cognate with German, Middle Dutch du, Old Norse thū, Gothic thu, Old Irish tú, Welsh, Cornish ti, Latin tū, Doric Greek tý, Lithuanian tù, OCS ty; akin to Sanskrit tvam;(v.) late Middle English thowen, derivative of the pronoun.
We Mormons use thee and thou because they appear in both the King James Bible and the Book of Mormon. We claim they should still be used in Church prayer because these words are more reverential than modern English words. My question is whether we have elevated these words from Elizabethan English into something more than the original word usage? Can any of you wordsmiths shed some moisture on this subject?
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