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Template:Early Modern English personal pronouns (table): Difference between revisions

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|+ [[Early Modern English#Pronouns|Personal pronouns in Early Modern English]]
|+ [[Early Modern English#Pronouns|Personal pronouns in Early Modern English]]
! colspan="2" |
! colspan="2" |
! Nominative
! [[Nominative case|Nominative]]
! [[Oblique case|Oblique]]
! [[Oblique case|Oblique]]
! Genitive
! [[Genitive case|Genitive]]
! Possessive
! [[Possessive case|Possessive]]
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" | 1st person
! rowspan="2" | 1st person

Revision as of 20:46, 16 February 2021

Personal pronouns in Early Modern English
Nominative Oblique Genitive Possessive
1st person singular I me my/mine[# 1] mine
plural we us our ours
2nd person singular informal thou thee thy/thine[# 1] thine
plural or formal singular ye, you you your yours
3rd person singular he/she/it him/her/it his/her/his (it)[# 2] his/hers/his[# 2]
plural they them their theirs
  1. ^ a b The genitives my, mine, thy, and thine are used as possessive adjectives before a noun, or as possessive pronouns without a noun. All four forms are used as possessive adjectives: mine and thine are used before nouns beginning in a vowel sound, or before nouns beginning in the letter h, which was usually silent (e.g. thine eyes and mine heart, which was pronounced as mine art) and my and thy before consonants (thy mother, my love). However, only mine and thine are used as possessive pronouns, as in it is thine and they were mine (not *they were my).
  2. ^ a b From the early Early Modern English period up until the 17th century, his was the possessive of the third-person neuter it as well as of the third-person masculine he. Genitive "it" appears once in the 1611 King James Bible (Leviticus 25:5) as groweth of it owne accord.