Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • pronoun You. Used as the nominative second person pronoun.
  • pronoun You. Used as the objective second person pronoun.
  • definite article. The.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • A Middle English form of yea.
  • noun An obsolete variant of eye.
  • The personal pronoun of the second person, in the plural number: now commonly applied also (originally with some notion of distinction or compliment, as in the case of the royal we) to a single individual, in place of the singular forms thee and thou—a use resulting in the partial degradation of thou to a term of familiarity or of contempt. Ye is archaic, and little used except in exalted address and poetry.
  • As used without discrimination of case-form between nominative and objective.
  • As used for a single subject.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • an old method of printing the article the (AS. þe), the “y” being used in place of the Anglo-Saxon thorn (þ). It is sometimes incorrectly pronounced yē. See the, and thorn, n., 4.
  • noun obsolete An eye.
  • adverb obsolete Yea; yes.
  • pronoun The plural of the pronoun of the second person in the nominative case.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • pronoun dialectal, Northern England, Cornish you (the people being addressed).
  • verb obsolete Address a single person by the use of the pronoun ye instead of thou.
  • determiner, article archaic, definite the

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Middle English, from Old English ; see yu- in Indo-European roots.]

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Alteration of Middle English þe, the (from the use of the letter y to represent the letter thorn (þ) in early English printing).]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English þe. The letter y is a variant of þ ("thorn"), a letter which corresponds to modern th, but letter þ did not exist in first press typographies, so was replaced using either "th" or "y". Etymological y was for a time distinguished by a dot, , but the letters were conflated when that was dropped.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English ye, ȝe, from Old English ġē ("ye"), the nominative case of the second-person plural personal pronoun, from Proto-Germanic *jūz (“ye”), from Proto-Indo-European *yūs (“ye”). Cognate with Scots ye ("ye"), Dutch gij, jij, je ("ye"), Low German ji, jie ("ye"), German ihr ("ye"), Danish and Swedish I ("ye"), Icelandic ér ("ye"). See also you.

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Examples

Comments

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  • This is (was?) actually pronounced 'the'.

    November 10, 2007

  • That's pretty wild. Source?

    November 13, 2007

  • True, uselessness. "Archaic The. Misreading of ye, from Middle English þe, spelling of the, (using the letter thorn)."

    Also of "you": "Archaic, used nominatively as the plural of thou, esp. in rhetorical, didactic, or poetic contexts, in addressing a group of persons or things): O ye of little faith; ye brooks and hills." And... "Used nominatively for the second person singular, esp. in polite address: Do ye not know me?"

    Interesting little word, ye. :-)

    November 13, 2007

  • In Cork, Ireland, the word "ye" is in common use as the plural of "you." Although it's recognised as not belonging to standard modern English, it is entirely normal to use it in conversation and, in fact, if the word "you" is used as a plural it may cause momentary confusion. I have seen the written form of the word in hand-written notes, letters etc but never in print. I believe this usage may be found in most/all parts of the country but may be less common in other areas.

    August 10, 2009

  • IrE: you (plural). AmE dialects have: y'all, yiz, youse, you guys -- but there's no exact non-dialect equivalent.

    April 19, 2011