I (pronoun)

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I (IPA: /aɪ/) is the first-person, singular personal pronoun (subject case) in Modern English. It is the person you are referring to when you are referring to yourself.

Personal pronouns in standard Modern English
Singular Plural
Subject Object Subject Object
First I me we us
Second you you you you
Third Masculine he him they them
Feminine she her
Neuter it it

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In orthography, this pronoun is comparable to proper nouns; in most writing I is always capitalised. However, internet slang on comment sites frequently shows a lower-case i.

The oblique cases of I are me (object) and my (possessive).

A first person subjunctive can be used as a circumlocution, to avoid direct criticism in the second person.

  • I wouldn't believe all you read. You shouldn't believe all you read.
  • I wouldn't do that [if I were you]. Don't you do that!

Compare:

  • One wouldn't do that oneself.

Further information: Proto-Indo-European pronouns

English I originates from Old English (OE) ic, the continuation of Proto-Germanic ik, ek, ek being attested in Elder Futhark inscriptions (in some cases notably showing the variant eka; see also ek erilaz); ik is assumed to have developed from the unstressed variant of ek.

Germanic cognates are: Old Frisian ik, Old Norse ek (Danish, Norwegian jeg), Old High German ih (German ich) and Gothic ik.

The Proto-Germanic root came, in turn, from the Proto Indo-European language (PIE). The reconstructed PIE pronoun is *egō, egóm, with cognates including Sanskrit aham, Hittite uk, Latin ego, Greek ἐγώ egō and Old Slavonic azъ. The oblique forms are formed from a stem *me- (English me), the plural from *wei- (English we), the oblique plural from *ns- (English us).

Personal pronouns in Old English
Nom Acc Dat Gen
1st Sing ic me(c) me min
Dual wit unc uncer
Plur we us ure
2nd Sing þu þe þin
Dual git inc incer
Plur ge eow eower
3rd Sing M he hine him his
N hit hit him his
F heo hie hire hire
Plur hie hie him hira
Nom Acc Dat Gen

By 1137 ic was reduced to i in Northern England. By around 1250 capitalisation began, to distinguish I as a distinct word.

Personal pronouns in Middle English
Singular Plural
Subject Object Possessive Subject Object Possessive
First I me mi(n) we us ure
Second thou thee thy ye you your
Third Impersonal hit it/him his he
they
hem
them
hir
their
Masculine he him his
Feminine sche hire hir

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