Thou vs Diddest - What's the difference?
thou | diddest |
To address (a person) using the pronoun thou, especially as an expression of familiarity or contempt.
* 1888 , Rudyard Kipling, ‘On the City Wall’, In Black and White , Folio Society 2005, p. 443:
To use the word thou.
(slang) A thousand, especially a thousand dollars, a thousand pounds sterling, etc.
(archaic, with thou)
*{{quote-book, year=1566, author=William Adlington, title=The Golden Asse, chapter=, edition=
, passage=Couldest not thou (that so often in his life time diddest spurne and kicke him) defend him now at the point of death by the like meane?}}
*{{quote-book, year=1592, author=R.D., title=Hypnerotomachia, chapter=, edition=
, passage=Poliphilus'', be of good comfort, and pluck vp a good heart, and tell me how thou commest hither, and by what meanes, and how thou diddest''' escape that mortall and horrible Dragon? and how thou ' diddest finde away out of that odious and blinde darkenes, I haue beene tould of it: But I maruell me not a little, because few or none dare aduenture that waye.}}
As verbs the difference between thou and diddest
is that thou is to address (a person) using the pronoun {{term|thou|lang=en}}, especially as an expression of familiarity or contempt while diddest is form of do|lang=en.As a pronoun thou
is you singular informal, nominative caseAs a noun thou
is a unit of length equal to one-thousandth of an inch.thou
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) thou, thow, thu, ).Alternative forms
* (l), (l), (l), (l)Usage notes
* , as in, for example, “Lovest thou me?” Irregular forms include: (art) (of be), (hast) (of have), shalt (of shall), wost (of (wit)), wilt (of (will)), and (m) (of (m)).Derived terms
* th'art * thou'lt * thou'rt * thou'stSee also
(English personal pronouns)Verb
(en verb)- "One service more, Sahib , since thou hast come so opportunely," said Lalun. "Wilt thou" – it is very nice to be thou-ed by Lalun – "take this old man across the City [...] to the Kumharsen Gate?"
- I thou thee, thou traitor! (Edward Coke to Walter Raleigh)
- Avaunt, caitiff, dost thou thou me! I am come of good kin, I tell thee!'' (The morality play ''Hickscorner , ca. 1530)
- If thou thou'st him some thrice, it shall not be amiss''[...] (''Twelfth Night'' 3.2, Sir Toby Belch to Sir Andrew, egging him on to pick a fight with another, where one would expect one knight courteously to say to another, "If ''you thou him...").
- Don't thou''' them as '''thous thee! (Yorkshire English admonition to overly familiar children)
Antonyms
*Etymology 2
Shortened from thousandth.Synonyms
* mil (US)Etymology 3
Shortened from thousand.Noun
(thou)diddest
English
Alternative forms
* (l)Verb
(head)citation
citation
