Thou
You (singular, subject) — used when speaking to one person.
Thee
You (singular, object) — used after a verb (e.g., I love thee).
Ye
You all / You (plural, subject) — used when speaking to a group.
You
You (plural, object) — same as modern English but usually plural.
Thy
Your (before consonant sounds). Example: Thy sword.
Thine
Your / Yours (before vowels or alone). Example: Thine eyes, this is thine.
Art
Are. Example: Thou art my God → You are my God.
Hast
Have. Example: Thou hast faith → You have faith.
Hath
Has. Example: He hath said → He has said.
Shalt
Shall. Example: Thou shalt not kill → You shall not kill.
Wilt
Will. Example: Thou wilt remember me → You will remember me.
Doest
Do (2nd person). Example: Thou doest well → You do well.
Doeth
Does (3rd person). Example: He doeth good → He does good.
Lovest
Love (you). Example: Thou lovest mercy → You love mercy.
Loveth
Loves. Example: He loveth righteousness → He loves righteousness.
Speakest
Speak (you). Example: Thou speakest the truth → You speak the truth.
Speaketh
Speaks. Example: He speaketh wisdom → He speaks wisdom.
Knowest
Know (you). Example: Thou knowest all things → You know all things.
Knoweth
Knows. Example: He knoweth them that trust in Him → He knows those who trust Him.
Verily
Truly, certainly. Example: Verily I say unto thee → Truly I say to you.