Contionary:ik
Skundavisk
Etymology
From Middle Skundavisk ik, from Old Skundavisk ik, from Halmisk ik, from Proto-Germanic *ik.
Pronunciation
IPA: /ɪk/
Pronoun
ik
- I
- ik ging heem tebak.
- I went back home.
- ik ging heem tebak.
Inflection
| number and gender | singular | plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | feminine | neuter | all genders | ||
| 1st person | nominative | ik | wi | ||
| accusative | mig | uns | |||
| genitive | mijn | unser | |||
| dative | mir | uns | |||
| 2nd person | nominative | thou | ji | ||
| accusative | thig | jer/jiw | |||
| genitive | thijn | jer/jiw | |||
| dative | thir | jer/jiw | |||
| 3rd person | nominative | hi | si | hit | si |
| accusative | hin | hee | hit | hir | |
| genitive | his | her | his | her | |
| dative | him | her | him | him | |
Usage notes
Synonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Valthungian
Etymology
From Old Valthungian ik, cf. Gothic ik, from Proto-Germanic *ek, *eką.
Pronunciation
(Valthungian) IPA: /ik/
Pronoun
- I. The first person singular pronoun.
- Ik, Þljugagasts Hœ̄ltis, hit horn taugiða.
- I, Hlewagastiz Holtijaz, made this horn.
- Ik, Þljugagasts Hœ̄ltis, hit horn taugiða.
Inflection
| Nom. | Gen. | Dat. | Acc. |
|---|---|---|---|
| ik | mīn | mis | mik |