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The Elizabethans used the word "you" exactly the same way we do now. Some examples from Shakespeare: "You are not wood, you are not stones, but men." -Julius Caesar. "Come, come, you answer with an idle tongue"-Hamlet. "Pray, have you not a daughter called Katharina, fair and virtuous?"-Taming of the Shrew.

Sometimes when only one person in being addressed, and that person is a lover, a child, an animal, or an inferior, an obsolete set of pronouns are used, which use a different set of verb forms. In these forms, the word for "you" is "thou" if the person is the subject of the sentence and "thee" if the object. (This is the same difference as that between "he" and "him" or between "I" and "me"

E.g. 1. "Wherefore art thou Romeo?" Romeo is Juliet's beloved and there is only one of him, so he uses "thou" Notice that the verb form "art" is used, rather than "are"

2. "Thou art a villain." Tybalt uses this form to show that Romeo is an inferior.

3. "Oh, Proteus, let this habit make thee blush" Julia (in The Two Gentlemen of Verona) is addressing her lover Proteus, but because it is the object of the sentence, she uses "thee"

4. "Of all men else have I avoided thee" Macbeth is the king so everyone is his inferior; he therefore uses this form with Macduff.

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