It’s no trouble meeting them at the station.
It can also be used as a preparatory object:
I consider it a compliment getting such a positive response from him.
(preferred to: I consider getting such a positive response from him a
compliment.)
He made it very difficult to like him and his sister.
It is also used in cleft constructions:
It was Sunita who reported them to the police.
(Sunita, not Jane)
Û
475c Cleft sentences
Û
128a It, this and that referring to segments of text
ARCHAIC FORMS
212
Some older forms of second person singular pronouns such as thou, thee, thy,
thyself, thine are only found in religious texts, in poetry and in some dialects of
English. In contemporary English the equivalents are:
thou : you (subject)
thee : you (object)
thy : your
thyself : yourself
thine : yours
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