== English ==
Wikipedia
=== Etymology ===
The term was borrowed by Middle English (as they, thei) in the 1200s from Old Norse þeir, the nominative plural masculine of the demonstrative sá, which acted in Old Norse as a plural pronoun. The Norse term derives from Proto-Germanic *þai (“those”), from Proto-Indo-European *to- (“that”). It gradually replaced Old English hī and hīe (“they”).
Cognate to Old English þā (“those”) (whence Modern English tho), Scots thae, thai, thay (“they; those”), Icelandic þeir (“they”), Faroese teir (“they”), Swedish de (“they”), Danish de (“they”), Norwegian ...