you, thou
汝 is an archaic or formal second-person pronoun, equivalent to 'you' or 'thou'. It is used to address someone directly, often with a sense of familiarity or authority.
The exact historical development of 汝 is uncertain. It visually combines 氵 (water) and 女 (woman), but this may not reflect the original semantic or phonetic intent.
Imagine a woman (女) by the water (氵) calling out 'you' to someone across the river. The scene helps recall the archaic second-person meaning.
For ジョ, picture a woman named Jo standing by the water, and you call out 'Jo!' to get her attention. Jo -> ジョ, and you are addressing her directly.
blockhead!; you
frailty, thy name is woman
frailty, thy name is woman
you
you
you
you
you
love your enemies
love your neighbour (neighbor)
ye; you
Know thyself
Know thyself
you; thou
close acquaintance; relationship where two people are close enough to use familiar language
hardship makes the man