How do you say (You) in your country?
jij
Tee.
(Sinä)
Vos
Sen
>>61923617
Ti.
But you in general can be ti (singular, informal), vi (singular formal), vidva (you two male/male and female), vidve (you two female), vi (plural). This shows that English should invest in finding more words for these concepts.
ti
Du
>>61923617
"tú" or "vos"
Jij, U of Gij
Tú
>>61923617
(Du)
>>61923877
>>61923990
Yooooooooo, we /language brothers/ now
I usually use omae or just their name with friends
>>61923617
(คุณ) koon
(ท่าน) taan
(เธอ) tuuh
(นาย) naai
(เจ้า) jao
(แก) gaae
(มึง) meung
(พี่) pii
(หนู) nuu
(ยู) you
(Your name)
(Tú)
(Du)
Ty
(Jij)
(Je) (Jou) (U)
>>61924083
je moeder
Ty - informal/singular you (=thou in old english)
Vy - formal/plural you
>>61923617
Here, have a (du)
>>61924110
(Gij)
>>61924045
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/t%C3%BA
tú masterrace reporting in
>>61923617
(Sen)
>>61924168
R A R E
A
R
E
>>61924207
Not really t b h
>>61923617
Informal: te
Formal: ön
Formal not really used anymore: maga.
>>61924207
S U M M E R
U
M
M
E
R
(Du)
>>61924083
>jij
hahahahahahahah
>>61924227
very rare 2bh
>>61923617
(Tи)
Asshole
(Ty)
(Tu) (Usted)
(Toi) or (Vous).
Aš
>>61925160
Merci pour l'advice
>>61923617
Language - Arabic
Standard pronunciation for masculine singular: أَنْتَ Anta
Standard pronunciation for feminine singular: أَنْتِ Anti
Slang pronunciation that works for both genders in the singular: أَنْت Ant
All three look identical in writing without short vowel diacritics: أنت
>>61923617
Tu
Aap (mostly to somebody elder)
>>61923617
Official written language: sinä
Actual words used in spoken dialects: sä, sää, nää, sie
>>61926606
truly greatest language
>>61923617
Schwuchtel
(Você)
>>61926606
Helsinki slang should be the the official written language. So much wasted space with the current form
Tú, usted
>>61923702
>>61923763
>>61924171
/turan/ confirmed
Vos, tu, usted.
>non-argies/uruguayans using ''vos''
stahp
>>61923639
>>61923678
>>61923702
>>61923721
>>61923763
>>61923770
>>61923778
>>61923826
>>61923877
>>61923934
>>61923990
>>61924033
>>61924045
>>61924048
>>61924062
>>61924064
>>61924069
>>61924083
>>61924110
>>61924142
>>61924150
>>61924164
>>61924168
>>61924171
>>61924207
>>61924227
>>61924228
>>61924282
>>61924291
>>61924301
>>61924306
>>61924422
>>61924479
>>61924989
>>61925062
>>61925160
>>61925270
>>61925407
>>61925414
>>61925557
>>61926606
>>61926640
>>61926699
>>61926704
>>61926816
>>61926821
>>61926895
>>61926941
>>61926954
>>61927594
(Tu)
If I put down Russian 'ты' (ty) in a handwriting style: 'mы', it can be read like 'мы' (me) which means 'we'. And yes, Russian 'we' sounds almost like English 'me'.
informal: (Du)
formal/plural: (Sie)
(tu)
(Ty)
(tu)
(você)
>>61932226
Correct
What do people in latin america use for you in the plural form? Is it true that vosotros isn't used anymore
That's what they taught us in spanish class
Tú
easy peasy
>>61923617
Informal:
Singular: (Te)
Plural: (Ti)
Formal:
Singular: (Ön)
Plural: (Önök)
>>61923617
(usted)
>>61932511
we use "ustedes", only Spain speakers use "vosotros"
>>61925160
surprisingly accurate
>>61924207
there are like dozens of us around here
(Tu)
You
>>61927594
Asi hablamos en centroamerica vos sudaca.