本帖最后由 choi 于 4-10-2017 15:06 编辑
(i) Old English grammar
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English_grammar
(section 1.5 Pronouns: "Most pronouns are declined by number, case and gender")
(A) decline (v): "[intransitive, transitive] decline (something) (grammar) if a noun, an adjective or a pronoun declines, it has different forms according to whether it is the subject or the object of a verb, whether it is in the singular or plural, etc. When you decline a noun, etc., you list these forms."
Oxford Learner's Dictionary, undated.
www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/us/topic/grammar/decline_2
(B) To put it simply, the "nominative case," "genitive case," "accusative case," and "dative case" are, respectively, sunject, possessive, direct object and indirect object. The enw.wikipedia.org for the page of "dative case" gives an example: "Maria gave Jacob a drink," where Jacob and a drink are , respectively, direct and indirect objects.
(C) Do not worry that the words in this section look weird. These words were written in letters of that era, not Modern English with 26 letters. What the Old English words look like in the Modern English alphabet will be displayed in (iii).
(ii) Middle English
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_English
(section 3.2 Pronouns)
So you see, in Middle English, the first-person plural form for subject and object were indeed "we/us" (as this Economist article says).
(iii)
(A) Seamus Cooney, A Note on Shakespeare's Grammar. Western Michigan University, Sept 15, 1996.
http://homepages.wmich.edu/~cooneys/tchg/lit/adv/shak.gram.html
The table in section (1)(A) Pronouns is not entirely correct, where "thine" is the sole possessive formfor second person singular. See next.
(B) centrelli, Thou, Thee, Thy, Thine & Ye: Shakespearean English. (Un) Enlightened English, July 1, 2009.
http://unenlightenedenglish.com/ ... kespearean-english/
Quote:
"Word Translation When to use
* * *
Thy Your Possessive form of you. Commonly used before a noun that begins with a consonant/consonant sound (like the article, "a").
Thine Your Possessive form of you. Commonly used before a noun that begins with vowel/vowel sound (like the article, "an"). Also used when indicating that something is "absolute and understood."
(iv) King James Bible (completed in 1611; Compare William Shakespeare (1564-1616) ): "in lowlinesse of minde let each esteeme other better then themselues" Philippians 2:3
Several versions of Modern English Bible translate as follows: "in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves"
(f) "The alternatives are worse. * * * Inventing pronouns does not help: from hersh ['he or she' as well as its pronunciation, compressed to one word] to ze, made-up gender-neutral pronouns have never taken off and probably never will. One alternative would be to make the referent plural: 'Presidents choose their own cabinets.' "
referent (n): "one that refers or is referred to"
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/referent |