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Thee, thou, and thine (or thy) are early modern english second person singular pronouns But likely no one used thinketh for the second person. Thou is the subject form (nominative), thee is the object form, and thy/thine is the possessive form
Thee and you as object Some dialects (quakers or so) may have used thee in place of thou Ye and you used alongside thou and thee as polite singular forms
Distinction between ye as subject and you as object disappeared, you being used almost universally
Ye restricted to archaic, religious or literary contexts by the end of the 16th century The interesting question here is why the thee / thou forms are used in the kjv, and why they are so often still used in christian contexts Was the plural / respectful form you considered inappropriate for theological reasons (because the god of the kjv is very much a singular, not a plural)? However, i can't imagine a typical yorkshireman who would use thee and thou being sufficiently delicate as to use the word thine
I do agree with janus though, that art is the verb required in who art thou? I doubt this is a fax or anything Thee and you were used as object During the middle english period, ye/you came to be used as a polite singular form alongside thou/thee
During early modern english, the distinction between subject and object uses of ye and you gradually disappeared.
The is pronounced thee when it precedes a word that begins with a vowel (the apple, the overtone series, etc.) or (sometimes) an aspirated consonant (the historic occasion of his birth) or when the speaker wishes to differentiate a noun by calling it out for special dramatic emphasis. Thee did not merge with ye or thou with you, but rather in most regions people simply stopped saying the singular thee and thou except perhaps when they came across it in their prayer book And when they did say it as part of the lord's prayer, they were not confused as to how it was pronounced Thee just died a death out of politeness.
I believe when thee thinketh was never correct in old english, nor in elizabethan english More likely would be when thou think'st
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