Ik

From Fresh Dictionary

Contents

English

Etymology

Old English iċ, from Indo-European *egom.

Pronoun

  1. (Obsolete): I - Piers Plowman
    Note: The Northern dialectic form of I, in Early English, corresponding to ich of the Southern

Dutch

Etymology

Old Saxon ik, from Indo-European *egom.

Pronunciation

Personal pronoun

ik

  1. First-person singular, subjective: I.

Related terms

See Wiktionary:Dutch inflection

Quotations

  • Julius Caesar
    Ik kwam, ik zag, ik overwon.
    I came, I saw, I conquered.

Latvian

Adverb

ik

  1. every

Low Saxon

Etymology

Old Saxon ik, from Indo-European *egom.

Pronunciation

/ik/

Personal pronoun

ik, first person singular, referring to oneself.

Translations

  • English: I

Related words

  • mien (possesive, my, mine); mi (objective case, me); wi (plural, we).

Examples

Ik kwam, ik zag, ik overwon (nl), Ik keem, ik keek, ik wun (pd): I came, I saw, I conquered. (Lat.: 'Veni, Vidi, Vici', attributed to w:Julius Caesar.)

es:ik fr:ik io:ik id:ik it:ik la:ik hu:ik nl:ik pl:ik pt:ik fi:ik vi:ik zh:ik

Personal tools