it means: you vile(foul, depraved, evil) king
i dunno, but i guess u were prolly wondering 'bout the arhaic pronoun. it is the singular, not plural 2nd person pronoun in nominative case. the others go like so: sing. nom you(thou), plur. nom you(ye), sing. objec. you(thee), plur. objec. you(you), sing. poss. your/yours(thy/thine), plur. poss your/yours(your/yours)
Mind that your is used as a possessive adjective and yours as a possessive pronoun.
Oh, the line is from Hamlet, right? sry but I'm not familiar with the context of this sentence. Maybe some1'll care 2 explain this aspect of it, if that's what u r looking 4.
You did
You were
Thee and thou mean "you" in old english.
"Where art thou" means "where are you." The use of the word "thou" indicates the speaker is asking someone who is on friendly, informal terms with him, or her.
Vile is an adjective.
"Thou cad, thou serpent, thou viper; so low, so vile, so base"
A vile person can be defined as someone who is horrible, mean, disgusting and evil.
One thing you meant 'mean'?Meam,well is a Latin word.Probably a color.But I don't think so.Go check out "Vile"."Vile" was in your question.But you can check down below.~Vile~Loathsome; disgusting: vile language.Unpleasant or objectionable: vile weather. See synonyms at http://www.answers.com/topic/offensive.Contemptibly low in worth or account; second-rate.Of mean or low condition.Miserably poor and degrading; wretched: a vile existence.Morally depraved; ignoble or wicked: a vile conspiracy
It means vile, reprehensible.
In the King James version the word - thou - appears 5474 times
"Where are you".
You did
You were
Smile Kyle.
Thee and thou mean "you" in old english.
They aren't. The phrase - thou will - is ungrammatical and is more properly written as - thou wilt - or - thou shalt. The word - thou - appears 5,474 times in the KJV. The phrase - thou shalt - appears 109 times The phrase - thou wilt - appears 1,250 times
Hi