Middle English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Old English þēon (strong class 1), from Proto-Germanic *þinhaną (strong class 3); a cognate of Middle Dutch diën. In later Old English, þēon changed to strong class 2 on the model of tēon, meaning the past participle became þogen; in Middle English, the -g- vocalised to -w-, resulting in a form thowen. Past singular forms in -w- were then analogically created on the basis of this past participle (see the inflection table below).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈθeːən/, /θeːn/

Verb

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theen

  1. To experience success, wealth, or prosperity.
  2. To expand, increase, or become grown.
  3. (rare, Early Middle English) To induce prosperity.

Conjugation

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Descendants

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  • English: thee (obsolete or dialectal)
  • Scots: thee, the

References

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