Sie

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Bavarian

Etymology

Borrowed from German Sie.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /si(ː)/, (stressed) , (unstressed) ,

Pronoun

Sie

  1. you (formal)

Usage notes

In Bavarian the formal pronoun Sie is used less often than in Standard German. It can be used in both singular and plural, but it's even less common in the plural.

Sie was mostly used towards strangers, especially those who don't speak Bavarian, as they would consider the Bavarian usage of du as rude, however it becomes more common by the influence of Standard German.

See also

Central Franconian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old High German *sīda, northern variant of sīta, from Proto-Germanic *sīdǭ.

Pronunciation

Noun

Sie f (plural Sijje)

  1. (westernmost Ripuarian) side
    Jank op Sie!Go aside!
  2. (westernmost Ripuarian) page

German

Alternative forms

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

Pronoun

Sie

  1. you (polite; singular and plural)
    Was möchten Sie, Frau Wagner?
    What would you like to have, Mrs. Wagner?

Usage notes

  • The German Sie expresses distance in the relation between two persons. It is not perfectly correct to say that it expresses respect. Sie has never been used to address gods and saints. Towards parents it was only briefly used during the 18th century by some of the upper classes. (In both of these cases, however, Ihr was formerly possible alongside du.) Even royal highnesses used to be addressed as du, albeit not personally but in songs and poems (compare the famous "Heil dir im Siegerkranz").
  • Sie is identical in form to the third person plural pronoun sie (they) and takes the same verb form. The "polite" Sie is distinguished in writing by capitalization. The only form which is not capitalized is the reflexive sich. When addressing a person with Sie, one generally needs to replace the third person plural pronoun with the demonstrative die ("those ones") to avoid confusion: Wissen Sie, was die zu mir gesagt haben? − “Do you know what they said to me?”

Declension

  • The genitive case Ihrer is more and more rarely used in modern German.
  • The genitive case Ihrer does not express ownership, so it must not be confused with the possessive pronoun Ihr, which is declined by gender, singular/plural and case.

Derived terms

Anagrams

Pennsylvania German

Etymology

Compare German Sie.

Pronunciation

Pronoun

Sie

  1. you (polite)

Declension