Mmmm, clean sheets. Which reminds me, past my bedtime. G'night Bitches. Yes, tomorrow, she shall be a better day.
Spike's Bitches 38: Well, This Is Just...Neat.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
poor Darcey, poor Laura. I hope tomorrow is a better day.
{{{Laura}}}
And poor Darcey and family.
YAY Gris! Go you!
-t, the other plural you that was sometimes used was "ye."
My Mom is nutty. My sister just told her that she told her husband he is no longer invited to family gatherings where Mom or I will be there. Mom replied, "are you sure? Let me talk this over with Liz." Gah! Of course you're sure you crazy woman! You loathe this guy as much as I do.
More knowledge, yay!
Is there a difference between "you" as a plural and "ye" as a plural?
Well "you" was a lot more common. Hm. Maybe "ye" is more formal? (i.e. "Hear ye, hear ye" as a call to begin a meeting.) Nah, I don't think so. I don't think there's much of a difference in Shakespeare's usage of you/ye, but I could be wrong.
So in other words, I don't know. My ass-talking, let me show you it.
Is there a difference between "you" as a plural and "ye" as a plural?
I'm amused that when I tried to decide this in my head the phrase that popped up was "ye scabrous dogs".
Is there a difference between "you" as a plural and "ye" as a plural?
Ye is archaic, but was early modern English second person plural.
The annoying thing about "you" is the potential for confusion between singular and plural. Maybe i just mean the one person i'm looking at, maybe i mean the entire room, maybe i only mean the five people in the room i actually like. Too much potential confusion. Yet another problem with the English language. (That and the letter "c." It is a useless, confusing letter.)
Ye is archaic, but was early modern English second person plural.Yes, but so is "you." That's the confusing thing about you/ye--they're both early modern English second person plural.
This site: [link] says "ye" was the subject and "you" was the object form of the plural. Which I should be able to parse. You would think. Er, ye would. I implore you. Hm.