Þigge, v. S. [þicgan] to beg, 1373. This word is chiefly preserved in the Sc. writers. Wall. ii. 259; Doug. Virg. 182, 37; Evergreen, ii. 199; Bannatyne Poems, p. 120, V. Jam. in v., who derives it from Su.-G. tigga, Alem. thigen, petere. [See tigga in Ihre. “Thyggynge or beggynge, Mendicacio.” Prompt. Parv.]
Þis for þise, these, 1145.
Þisternesse, n. S. darkness, 2191.
Dalden from þan fihte
Al bi þustere nihte.
Laȝam. l. 7567; cf. Gen. and Ex., 58.
Thit, pp. 2990. [The rime shews that the i is long; and, whether the th is sounded like t, or (which is more likely) the word should have been written tiht or tith, we may be tolerably confident that it is equivalent to the O.E. tight or tiȝt, a pp. signifying intended, purposed, designed, which is the exact sense here required. Stratmann gives five instances of it, of which one is— “To brewe the Crystene mennys banys Hy hadden tyght;” Octovian, 1476.]
Þo, pron. S. those, 1918, 2044.
Þo, pron. thou. See [Þu].
Þo, adv. S. then, 930; when, 1047. Thow, 1669.