Ye, Olde, Taverne,...
In English, 'Ye' is an archaic form of the second person plural, familiar (nominative). It was the old way to say 'you all.' While it has fallen out of use in English, other modern day languages (Spanish and German, for example) still use this form of address.
If you're referring to the old English saying, it's "hear ye, hear ye".
In older English, "thee" is a pronoun used to address one person informally and singularly, akin to "you." It is the object form of "thou" or "ye."
O come all ye faithful
What are you doing? That's what it means.
"Wo ye xi huan ni" means "I also like you."
I don't know what you mean by "ye-old," but curse words are not allowed on WikiAnswers website. It is against the TOU rules.
Ye is the old English way of saying you. In 1600 they would say "Would ye like a piece of pie?" we would say "Would YOU like a piece of pie?"
Yulgar is the innkeeper at the Ye Old Inn in BattleOnTown.
"Ye mas" in not directly translatable. Mas in English is "more", but "ye" is not a formal word - it might be a slang word, and if you can find the formal root it could be translated correctly. "Ye mas" might mean "I (want) more" (Yo quiero mas or quiero mas is the correct Spanish).
muje tumse ye umeed nhi thi