Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The ninth letter of the modern English alphabet.
- noun Any of the speech sounds represented by the letter i.
- noun The ninth in a series.
- noun Something shaped like the letter I.
from The Century Dictionary.
- The ninth letter and third vowel in the English alphabet.
- The Phenician character represented rather a consonant, a y, than a vowel, but it was converted to vowel value by the Greeks, and has continued to bear that value since (though in Latin used as consonant also). Our “short i” of it, etc., is not far from the original sound; yet nearer is the sound which we perversely call “long e” (of mete, meet, meat, etc.), or the i of machine, pique, etc. Because the words which anciently showed this latter sound have in great measure changed it to a diphthongal utterance (nearly ä +
i , or the ai of aisle), we have come to call the altered sound “long i.” The true i-sounds (in pick, pique) are close vowels, made with as near an approximation of the organs as is possible without giving rise to a fricative utterance. The approximation is made by the upper flat surface of the tongue to the palate, at or near the point where a complete closure makes a k-sound. Hence the i-sound has palatal affinities, and it (as also in less degree the e) is widely active in palatalizing a consonant: for example, in converting in modern English a t to ch, a d to j, an s to sh, a z to zh; having in older English, and in other languages, a like influence on a k or g. Hence, also, it is a vowel close to a consonant, and very nearly identical with the consonantal y, into which it passes freely. (SeeY .) I has also gained in many words before r the same sound that e and u have in the same situation: for example, fir, first. It enters into various digraphs, as ai, ei, ie, oi, ui. - As a symbol: The number one in the Roman notation.
- In logic, a symbol of the particular affirmative proposition: derived from the second vowel of the Latin word affirmo, I assert. See
A , 2 . - In chem., the symbol for iodine.
- An abbreviation
- In dental formulæ, in zoology, for incisor.
- Same as
i. e . - See i. e., i. q.
- noun A prefix (often spelled
y- , and sometimese- and a-) common in Middle English, as in i-blent, i-cast, i-don, i-take, i-cleped, i-wis, etc. (also spelled y-blent, y-cast, y-don, etc.), but entirely lost in modern English, except as traces remain in y-wis, adv. (sometimes erroneously written I wis), and in y-clept and a few other archaic perfect-participle forms affected by Spenser and other poets, and in alike, along, among, enough, everywhere, handiwork, and a few other common words in which the syllable concerned is not now recognized as a prefix. - noun An apparent connective, but properly a prefix, in hand-i-work and hand-i-craft (altered from
hand-craft in imitation of handiwork), and (now spelled -y-) in ever-y-where. See these words, and comparei- . - The usual symbol for the moment of inertia.
- In electricity, a symbol for current.
- In mathematics: The symbol (i or i) for the neomon, the square root of minus one (√—1, (—1)). In quaternions, the symbols i, j, k denote a system of three right versors in three mutually rectangular planes; thus i is a particular quaternion having for its amplitude one right angle.
- In chem., i- before certain compounds has reference to their inaction as distinguished from
dextro-rotation (d-) or levorotation (1-). - An abbreviation of Idaho;
- of the Latin Imperator, emperor;
- of Island;
- of intransitive.
- noun An occasional obsolete spelling of
eye . - noun A form of the negative prefix in- before gn- in some words of Latin origin, as in ignoble, ignore, ignorant, etc.
- noun In philology an abbreviation of
Indo-Euro-pean . - The ending of some Latin genitives singular of nouns and adjectives of the second declension, occurring in some ancient, medieval or modern Latin phrases used in English, as genius loci, lapis lazuli, quid novi, etc.
- The nominative case of the pronoun of the first person; the word by which a speaker or writer denotes himself.
- noun The pronoun I used as a substantive.
- noun In metaphysics, the object of self-consciousness; that which is conscious of itself as thinking, feeling, and willing; the ego.
- An obsolete form of
aye . - noun A light form of
in : as, “a worm i' the bud,’ - noun The usual ‘connecting vowel,’ properly the stem-vowel of the first element, of compound words taken or formed from the Latin, as in mult-i-form, cent-i-ped, ens-i-form, omn-i-potent, aur-i-ferous, bell-i-gerent, etc.
- A nominative plural ending of Latin masculine nouns and adjectives of the ‘second’ declension, with nominative singular in -us, or without suffix, many of which have come into English use, literary or technical.
- A nominative plural suffix of Italian nouns sometimes used in English, as banditti, dilettanti, lazzaroni, scudi, soprani, etc.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- pronoun The nominative case of the pronoun of the first person; the word with which a speaker or writer denotes himself.
- I, the ninth letter of the English alphabet, takes its form from the Phœnician, through the Latin and the Greek. The Phœnician letter was probably of Egyptian origin. Its original value was nearly the same as that of the Italian I, or long
e as inmete . Etymologically I is most closely related toe ,y ,j ,g ; as in di nt, de nt, be verage, L. bi bere; E. ki n, AS. cy nn; E. thi n, AS. þy nne; E. domini on, donj on, dung eon. - In our old authors, I was often used for ay (or aye), yes, which is pronounced nearly like it.
- As a numeral, I stands for 1, II for 2, etc.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun
cardinal numberone . - noun mathematics The
imaginary unit that is the positivesquare root of -1. Graphically, i is shown on the vertical (y-axis) plane. - noun engineering The
current flow in acircuit inamperes . - noun programming A common variable name representing a generic index, especially in loops.
- noun
close front unrounded vowel . - noun The ninth
letter of the Englishalphabet , calledi and written in theLatin script . - noun The
ordinal numberninth , derived from thisletter of the Englishalphabet , calledi and written in theLatin script . - noun The name of the
Latin script letterI /i . - noun The ninth letter of the
basic modern Latin alphabet . - pronoun obsolete capitalization of
I
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word i.
Examples
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- P h ï h îp c h o c ¸c doa nh ng h iÖp c ã nh iÒu c h i nh ¸nh - P h ï h îp c h o c ¸c doa nh ng h iÖp c ã nh ©n viª n di c h uyÓn lín Díi ®©y b ¶ng g i¸ g ä i ®iÖn th o¹i ®i q uè c tÕ
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- P h ï h îp c h o c ¸c doa nh ng h iÖp c ã nh iÒu c h i nh ¸nh - P h ï h îp c h o c ¸c doa nh ng h iÖp c ã nh ©n viª n di c h uyÓn lín Díi ®©y b ¶ng g i¸ g ä i ®iÖn th o¹i ®i q uè c tÕ
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The next Thing tou »re tt Dbfenre i% tkt fincc the Ray C G i$» by jtbu Meanj, j6*od« i* wiH he re* dered fo if refle&od ialp any other Pofidon • A* ftp - pofe G T parallel to O M, by awing the Ghf%PQ, j this new Clock, which I here obferve in fo elegant
The Young Gentleman and Lady's Philosophy: In a Continued Survey of the Works of Nature and Art ... 1781
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Rzg - B. u a. CoafeqneDtlv, V B is = toVD. i£». i.&i.
Instructions given in the drawing school established by the Dublin society 1769
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For loop, testing on existence rather than length, array lookup is combined with test, item () instead of array brackets. for (var i = 0, x; x = hColl. item (i++);) {} var i = somelength; do something (); while (i--);
Planet Sun 2008
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A TREATISE i iii jf iiii I i M i j i n ■ ■ III m mmmmmmlmmm II ■ a I I 'I t 1 ■' i, mmm I ■ i n ii I I I ■ ■ "l y f ■ ■ 11 'II i .i i' K - * ■ T »i, - j i T R E A T I S E '
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It was OK..i liked the over all look of the movie, i agree with the first 3 comments, definatly stronger at the start got a bit muddled in the middle and the ending should have been better, must say William Dafoe was excellent!
Sound Off: Spierig Brothers' Daybreakers - Your Thoughts? « FirstShowing.net 2010
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I LOVED Blade 1 and 2, but 3 was sad as if i needed to say that..i say lets give him a chance and bring back the Blade we all loved.
Wesley Snipes Ponders the Possibility of a Fourth Blade Movie « FirstShowing.net 2010
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So..i dunno, i wish him luch, but i don;t see Momoa fit this role..
Jason Momoa is Conan the Barbarian; Mickey Rourke In, Too? « FirstShowing.net 2010
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I am not scared of death but i am scared for my 20 yearold son .i am so scared that he will not be able to handel this treatment ,and i do not want him to ever feel what i felt .
oroboros commented on the word i
Symbol for "imaginary" numbers, i.e., squareroot of -1. A breakthrough concept in the development of mathematics.
January 31, 2007
bilby commented on the word i
Pity we don't have caps on word entries. In particular the I that comes to mind is, in the words of Sir Humphrey Appleby, "the perpendicular pronoun".
November 24, 2007
oroboros commented on the word i
I. Chemical element symbol for Iodine.
December 16, 2007
carolinacc commented on the word i
And, as Kant brilliantly showed, the person who is acquainted with the self, who refers to himself as ‘I’, is inescapably trapped into freedom.
source: http://www.axess.se/english/2008/01/theme_scruton.php.htm
August 6, 2008
vanishedone commented on the word i
Two years later, I see we duly have that perpendicular pronoun.
November 18, 2009
hernesheir commented on the word i
Minimalist device that encompasses iEverything. Simply "i".
January 28, 2010