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The form "thee" is an archaic pronoun meaning "you".

The form "thee" is the objective case (I saw thee) and "thou" is the nominative (thou art brave). The possessives are thy and thine, with thine used before a word with a vowel sound (thy words, thine enemy).

The more formal word was "ye", which was long the objective case of "you".

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13y ago
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14y ago

used especially in ecclesiastical or literary language and by Friends especially among themselves in contexts where the objective case form would be expected b-used by Friends especially among themselves in contexts where the subjective case form would be expected

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Q: What does thee mean?
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