Thou is the second person singular personal pronoun. All but extinct in spoken Modern English, it has been replaced by the plural form "you."
Thee and thou mean "you" in old english.
"thou" is old English for "you". I would say that it means the age at which you are ashamed to admit how old you are.
Standard English has an archaic, almost obsolete second person singular: thou, with the possessive and objective forms thy and thee. Second person singular verb forms are very rare, the most common being thou art, that is you are.Thou is regularly found in English writing before 1600, and in different forms ( thu, and du for example) it is current still in some English dialects. In Standard English we may use it for the exalted speech of prayer, and in certain old expressions.
Heofonum is the dative plural of the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) word heofon, meaning "heaven". Dative covered a lot of ground in Old English; heofonum could mean "to/for the heavens", or it could be the object of a preposition such as on ("in"). For example, the Lord's Prayer in Old English begins with the words Fæder ure þu þe eart on heofonum, literally "Father Our, Thou that art in [the] heavens".
tarry means currly in old english
Thee and thou mean "you" in old english.
"thou" is old English for "you". I would say that it means the age at which you are ashamed to admit how old you are.
"How art thou" is an old-fashioned way of asking "How are you?" in Old English. It is a formal or poetic way of inquiring about someone's well-being.
This is old english :-"thou" is an objective form of "thee" and was used to mean (singular) "you"."wast" is the second person singular past of the verb "be".So "thou wast" means "you were".
You're a randy old goat. (Thou art an unfaithful goat.)
"Thee" in Old English is a second person singular pronoun, used to address one person directly. It is the object form of "thou," which is the subject form. It is equivalent to the modern English "you."
Thou. It's archaic, but still used in rare places.
It is a Welsh hymn and it translates as Thou gravest or Thou has given
How are you, once was, How are thee in old English
It's Spanish for "I love thou."
"Pratest" is not Old English. The verb prate first appears in Middle English, related to the Dutch praten. The form "pratest" would be the 2nd person singular indicative, with the pronoun thou, meaning "you chatter idly."
"Thou" is an archaic, informal way of saying "you" in the English language. It was commonly used in early modern English but has largely fallen out of use in contemporary language.