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-i Definition

-i

See also Appendix:Variations of "i"

Contents

English

Etymology 1

From , the plural ending of the Latin second declension, whence the plural of Italian nouns in -o and -e.

Suffix

-i

  1. used to indicate a plural form of some words of Latin or Italian origin, such as virtuosi or concerti

References

Etymology 2

From the Arabic nisba suffix ـي (-iyy). In English productive from the 19th century.

Suffix

-i

  1. Used to form adjectives and nouns describing people of a particular city, region, or country, and the language spoken by these people.
    IraqIraqi, IsraelIsraeli, PakistanPakistani, BengalBengali, NepalNepali, Desh → Desi, Hyderabad → Hyderabadi

References


Esperanto

Etymology 1

Perhaps from Latin deponent verbs such as loqui "to speak".

Suffix

-i

  1. (verbal inflection marking the infinitive)

Etymology 2

Common to English e (pronounced [i]) in me, she, he, we and the Italian accusative pronouns mi, ti, vi, li, si.

Suffix

-i

  1. common vowel of personal pronouns: mi, ni, ci, vi, li, ŝi, ĝi, oni, ili, si.

Finnish

Etymology 1

From fusion of Proto-Uralic *-j with a stem vowel. Originally allomorphic with -o.

Suffix

-i

  1. A nominal suffix used in eg. syle- (“fathom”) → syli (“bosom”), ukko (“man”) → ukki (“grandfather”).
  2. (archaic) Used to mark the first part of a compound word, eg. lehmä (“cow”) → lehmi-.

See also

Etymology 2

Suffix

-i

  1. Derives a number of adverbs of generally lative or locative meaning, eg. aukea- (“to open”) → auki (“open”), ylä- (“upper, high”) → yli (“over”).

See also

German

Suffix

-i

  1. (sometimes used to create a diminutive form, as in Hans Hansi)

See also


Hungarian

Pronunciation

Suffix

-i

  1. Added to a proper noun or a noun to form an adjective.
    Amerika (“America”) → amerikai (“American”)
    város (“city”) → városi élet (“city life”)
  2. Diminutive suffix added to nouns, mostly used by the younger generation or in informal conversations.
    fagylaltfagyi - ice cream
  3. his, her, its ... -s (third-person singular possessive suffix denoting plural possession)
    kapu (“gate”) → a kapui (“his/her/its gates”)
    palota (“palace”) → a palotái (“his/her/its palaces”)
    érme (“coin”) → az érméi (“his/her/its coins”)
  4. your ... -s (second-person singular and plural formal and polite possessive suffix denoting plural possession)
    kapu (“gate”) → a maga kapui (“your (singular, formal) gates”)
    kapu (“gate”) → az ön kapui (“your (singular, polite) gates”)
    kapu (“gate”) → a maguk kapui (“your (plural, formal) gates”)
    kapu (“gate”) → az önök kapui (“your (plural, polite) gates”)

Usage notes

See also


Ido

Suffix

-i

  1. -s (Marks the plural form of nouns, by replacing the -o ending.)

Italian

Suffix

-i

  1. Used with a stem to form the second-person singular present of regular are, -ere verbs and those -ire verbs that don't take "isc"
  2. Used with a stem to form the second-person imperative of -ere verbs
  3. Used with a stem to form the first-, second- and third person singular present subjunctive of -are verbs
  4. Used with a stem to form the third-person singular imperative of -are verbs

Romanian

Etymology 1

From Latin (“second-declension ending”)

Suffix

-i

  1. (plural) -s (masculine)
Usage notes

Etymology 2

From Latin illī, nominative masculine plural of ille.

Suffix

-i m.

  1. (definite article) the (masculine plural, nominative and accusative)
Usage notes

This form of the definite article is used for masculine plural nouns in the nominative and accusative cases (as attached to the indefinite plural, which always ends in a vowel):

The suffix is also used with masculine and neuter singular plural adjectives in the nominative and accusative cases to make the articulated definite form, often for emphasis, and it is used before the noun it modifies.

Related terms
  • -l (masculine/neuter singular nominative and accusative)
  • -a (feminine singular nominative and accusative)
  • -le (feminine plural nominative and accusative)
  • -lui (masculine/neuter singular genitive and dative)
  • -ei (feminine singular genitive and dative)
  • -lor (plural genitive and dative)

Etymology 3

From Latin -īre, the ending of the present active infinitive form of fourth conjugation verbs. Cognate with Spanish and French -ir, Italian -ire, etc.

Suffix

-i

  1. A suffix forming infinitives of many verbs.
Usage notes
See also

Swedish

Suffix

-i

  1. -y; when added to one noun, creates a new one that indicates the use or activity of the first. See also -eri.

Derived terms

Swedish words suffixed with -i

Turkish

Suffix

-i

  1. Third-person singular possessive suffix denoting singular possession.
    ev - evi
    house - his/her/its house
    ofis - ofisi
    office - his/her/its office
  2. Accusative suffix.
    gelin - gelini

Usage notes


Uzbek

Suffix

-i (-и)

  1. Third person singular possessive suffix. Used after a noun ending in a consonant. It has the same meaning as uning (“its”) placed before a noun.
    • Bu kitobi.
      "This is its book."

 

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I ( / ˈ aɪ /; named i, plural ies) is the ninth letter and a vowel in the ISO basic Latin alphabet.
from: Wikipedia: -i,
Sun May 13 07:15:01 2012

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from: Wikiquote: -i,
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