The thorn. Concocted by scholarly monks in the latter days of the Roman occupation of Britain to represent the English TH sound, which was unknown in Latin. Sometimes written as a kind of Y in superscript, which is the origin of "ye," as in "Ye Olde Pub." This was never pronounced, and never meant to be pronounced, as it's (apparently) spelled--the Y was supposed to be a thorn representing TH. But such is the memory of a people that its Y-like form has come to be commonly accepted as meaning that those weird old English-speakers said ye instead of the.

Frequently encountered by scholars of Anglo-Saxon literature when reading about Sir Gawain or the fight at Badon Hill.

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