ik
North Frisian
/ɪk/
pronoun
Definitions
- I
Etymology
Inherited from Old Frisian ik inherited from Proto-Germanic *ek (I) inherited from Proto-Indo-European *éǵh₂ (I).
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*éǵh₂
Gloss
I
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- I English
- I$ English
- I'll English
- I-hood English
- I-ness English
- I-ship English
- Ihood English
- ego Latin
- ich German
- ich-synton German
- ichbezogen German
- ik Dutch, Flemish
- ἐγώ Ancient Greek
- *egom Proto-Indo-European
- *h₁me Proto-Indo-European
- *éǵh₂ Proto-Indo-European
- *éǵh₂om Proto-Indo-European
- *ek Proto-Germanic
- *ek, *ik Proto-Germanic
- *ik Proto-Germanic
- アイ・ラブ・ユー Japanese
- ic Old English
- iċ Old English
- I Middle English
- ek Old Norse
- jeg Danish
- jegfortæller Danish
- *(j)a Proto-Slavic
- *(j)azъ Proto-Slavic
- ic Middle Dutch
- ih Old High German
- ես Old Armenian
- ek Afrikaans
- ich Middle High German
- 𐌹𐌺 Gothic
- *ik gmw-pro
- ik Old Dutch
- mī Old Dutch
- ik Middle Low German
- *aȷ́ʰám Proto-Indo-Iranian
- ic Old Saxon
- ik Old Saxon
- *egō Proto-Italic
- ik Old Frisian
- ik German Low German
- ick Low German
- *ajám Proto-Iranian
- ᛖᚲ Proto-Norse
- ñuk Tocharian A
- ai Torres Strait Creole
- *ʔúǵ Proto-Anatolian
- ik Wastek