T-form
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the first letter of the second-person singular pronoun in Romance languages; ultimately from Latin tu and Proto-Indo-European *túh₂.
Noun
[edit]- (linguistics) A second-person pronoun used in informal situations, to address friends, family, and sometimes inferiors.
- 1996, Marco Jacquemet, Credibility in Court:
- Shifting his feet and still perplexed, he then asked me if I was a faculty researcher, using again the informal T-form.
- 2002, The Bible Translator:
- In the Erzin dialect, children address their parents with the V-form; to use the T-form would show a lack of respect for parents.
- 2012, Marcel Bax, Dániel Z. Kádár, Understanding Historical (Im)Politeness:
- Typically, the informal pronominal address term (T-form) is the original second-person pronoun (Latin tu; Germanic du) and the polite or formal V-form is a plural form.
Antonyms
[edit]- (antonym(s) of “informal second-person pronoun”): V-form
Translations
[edit]informal second-person pronoun
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