Nemi
01-31-2005, 08:45 PM
Can anyone tell me which is the formal and which is the informal?
MY seminar teacher says thou is formal, but I'm sure it's informal. That's why in "Othello", Brabantio switches from "you" to "thou" when he discovers it's Roderigo (is that right? i forget his name) shouting up the blacony to him. My seminar teacher says she doesn't remember that scene though, and insists on continuing to teach the class that thou is the formal one...
I know its only a little point, but this is one thing I rememeber finding out last year, and it sticking because I found it really interesting. We were discussing a poem as well though, "O rose, thou art sick" so she was saying it didn't have a mothering tone, but it was praising, looking up, because thou isn't informal, its the informal. I'm sure I'm right though!!
Anyone know??
MY seminar teacher says thou is formal, but I'm sure it's informal. That's why in "Othello", Brabantio switches from "you" to "thou" when he discovers it's Roderigo (is that right? i forget his name) shouting up the blacony to him. My seminar teacher says she doesn't remember that scene though, and insists on continuing to teach the class that thou is the formal one...
I know its only a little point, but this is one thing I rememeber finding out last year, and it sticking because I found it really interesting. We were discussing a poem as well though, "O rose, thou art sick" so she was saying it didn't have a mothering tone, but it was praising, looking up, because thou isn't informal, its the informal. I'm sure I'm right though!!
Anyone know??