You dictionary

  1. ‎Dictionary. on the App Store
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  3. You Definition & Meaning


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‎Dictionary. on the App Store

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Slang Archives

Slang dictionary What is slang? It’s more than just a noun we define on Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com’s slang dictionary brings you slang definitions, plus everything you ever needed to know about American English slang words, Gen Z slang, British slang, and more! Find out how to use the new words you just read on social media or heard on Netflix. Learn where slang words were born and how they became popular. You’ll be a slang expert in no time.

You Definition & Meaning

How did you become singular? The history of the pronoun you provides a good example of the effect social forces can have on the language. Originally, the pair ye and you was used along with thee and thou to refer to people in the second person, ye and you for plural and thee and thou for singular. You began as the grammatical object, used in the following ways: I see you sitting there together. I gave you six apples, three for each. These uses are known respectively as the accusative and dative cases. The singular for this use would be thee: For thee there are three apples. Of thee I sing. When the second person plural was used as a grammatical subject, ye was used. Seek and ye shall find. This use is called the nominative case. The singular for this use would be thou: How great thou art. As far back as the 14th century, the plural forms ye and you began to be used to address one person—usually a superior—as a mark of deference and respect. This change could have been influenced by the first-person plural we ( thou and thee marked only an intimate or personal relationship or a superior-to-inferior relationship. It was even sometimes used to show deliberate disrespect. Queen Elizabeth I seems to have used only you in writing, and a user of her prestige must have given you a boost. By about the middle of the 16th century the contrast in function between ye and you began breaking down, with the effect that you was more frequently used as a subject pronoun as use of ye decreas...