ye olde
English
Etymology
Pseudo-loan from Middle English, derived from the + old.[1] First attested in 1850.
Pronunciation
- (properly) (UK) IPA(key): /ðiː əʊld/; (US) IPA(key): /ði oʊld/
- (commonly) (UK) IPA(key): /jiː əʊld(i)/; (US) IPA(key): /ji oʊld/
Phrase
- Pseudoarchaic form of the old, as to suggest antiquity or old tradition.
- I'm not wasting my time going to lectures given by ye olde professor Jones.
- Ye Olde Coffee Shoppe
- 1955, Joyce Cary, Not Honour More, New Directions Publishing, →ISBN, page 98:
- All this time waiting at door. At last young fellow in a white jacket condescended to answer my bell—and asked me to wait some more in the porch. But I didn't see it and walked into ye olde tyme lounge hall, panelled in Elizabethan linen-fold oak made out of chewed paper painted olde shitte colour.
- 2012, Richard Marcinko, Seal Force Alpha, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:
- Judging from the panicked look and white pallor on Pinky's face, I'd just put him between ye olde rock and ye olde harde place. Not my problem.
Adjective
- Old-fashioned, antiquated, historic, especially in a contrived manner.
Usage notes
- Jocularly added as an adjective to modern nouns to indicate that something is either outmoded or comfortably old fashioned. See ye (“the”) for more on how the spelling arose.
References
- “ye olde, adj. & n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.