The spelling "thee" is an archaic term for "you" (opposite case is thou, possessives thy and thine).
The best you wish in thee is thee that wish
Thee and thou mean "you" in old english.
And shepherds we shall be for Thee my Lord for Thee, Power hath descended forth from Thine hand that our feet may swiftly carry-out Thy command, And we shall flow a river forth to Thee and teeming with souls shall it ever be, For Thee my Lord for Thee. In Nomine Et Patri, Et Filii, Spiritus Sancti
Thees
Take and word are stressed, the rest unstressed.
Twenty thee th
Its spelled the same " diabetes " just pronounced differently: thee-ah-BAYtess
The word is spelled "the", just as you spelled it.The similar word is the archaic form of you, spelled thee.
It is spelled the same. I means the same meaning. :)Another AnswerBiblically, you can use thee.
"Goddess Hecate, work thy will. Before thee, let the unlean thing crawl!"
The letters can be used to spell the 6 letter words beetle and helmet. They spell the 5 letter words melee and theme. They can be used to spell the 4 letter words beet, belt, heel, helm, meet, melt, thee and them.
Here are some hints to helping you remember how to spell watermelon.W=Watera=att=thee=earlyr=runW=We'rea=attackingt=thee=easterr=rabbitP.S. "Watermelon" in Latin is spelled: Citrullus lanatus(Some guy named "Thunb" called it that.)
There is no anagram. The longest words are 4 letters: hate, heap, heat, pate, path, peat, pita, pith, tape, and thee.
gaol "Tha gaol agam ort." (Hah GEUL AH-kum orsht) "I love you." or literal translation "my Love is upon thee"
The best you wish in thee is thee that wish
Thee refers to "my country". It's another way of saying "my country, this song is about you"
You have just spelt it right. Thee