English, asked by Dyangchen, 9 months ago

who is thee in the sonnet 29

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
39
'Thee' implies a particular person, one close enough to be addressed by it; 'you', on the other hand, could mean any layman of the poetess' acquaintance. It is therefore infinitely more possible that the use of the poeticsonnet as part and parcel to marshall and explain and to show off her feelings is accurate.




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Answered by yumn
8

Answer:

Thee implies a particular person, one close enough to be addressed by it; 'you', on the other hand, could mean any layman of the poetess' acquaintance. It is therefore infinitely more possible that the use of the poeticsonnet as part and parcel to marshall and explain and to show off her feelings is accurate.

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