i bidinformation page
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| Latin alphabet |
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Aa |
Bb |
Cc |
Dd |
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| Ee |
Ff |
Gg |
Hh |
Ii |
Jj |
| Kk |
Ll |
Mm |
Nn |
Oo |
Pp |
| Qq |
Rr |
Ss |
Tt |
Uu |
Vv |
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Ww |
Xx |
Yy |
Zz |
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- Due to MediaWiki's uppercase algorithm, ı (lower case dotless i) will bring you here.
I is the ninth letter in the Latin alphabet.
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Codes for computing
- 3 Meanings for I
- 4 See also
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History
| Egyptian hieroglyph ˁ |
Proto-Semitic Y |
Phoenician Y |
Etruscan I |
Greek I |
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In Semitic, the letter Yôdh was probably originally a pictogram for an arm with hand, derived from a similar hieroglyph that had the value of /ˁ/ in Egyptian, but was reassigned to /j/ (pronounced as English Y in "yoke") by Semites, because their word for "arm" began with that sound. This letter could also be used for the vowel sound /i/, mainly in foreign words.
The Greeks adopted a form of this Phoenician yodh as their letter iota (Ι, ι). It stood for the vowel /i/, the same as in the Old Italic alphabet. In Latin (as in Modern Greek), it was also used for the consonant sound of /j/. The modern letter J was originally a variation of this letter, and both were interchangeably used for both the vowel and the consonant, only coming to be differentiated in the 16th century.
In modern English, I represents different sounds, mainly a "long" diphthong /ai/, that developed from /i:/ during the Great vowel shift of the 15th century, as well as the "short", open /I/ as in "bill". The dot over the lowercase 'i' is sometimes called a tittle. In the Turkish alphabet, dotted and dotless I are considered separate letters and both have uppercase (I, İ) and lowercase (ı, i) forms.
Codes for computing
Alternative representations for I
| NATO phonetic |
Morse code |
| India |
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| Signal flag |
Semaphore |
ASL Manual |
Braille |
In Unicode the capital I is codepoint U+0049 and the lowercase i is U+0069.
The ASCII code for capital I is 73 and for lowercase i is 105; or in binary 01001001 and 01101001, correspondingly.
The EBCDIC code for capital I is 201 and for lowercase i is 137.
The numeric character references in HTML and XML are "I" and "i" for upper and lower case respectively. Though there shouldn't ever be any reason to use them.
Meanings for I
- In astronomy, i stands for the orbital inclination.
- In biochemistry, I is the symbol for isoleucine.
- In chemistry, I is the symbol for iodine.
- In computing,
<i> is the HTML tag for marking italic type. It is also commonly used as the name of the index variable in for loops when no other name suggests itself.
- In English, I is the nominative case of the pronoun denoting the first person, singular. See Wiktionary:I.
- In international licence plate codes, I stands for Italy.
- In the International Phonetic Alphabet, the letter I appears in three forms; its lowercase version, /i/, refers to the close front unrounded vowel; its barred version, /ɨ/, stands for the close central unrounded vowel; and its small capital version, /ɪ/, represents the near-close near-front unrounded vowel.
- In mathematics,
- i denotes the imaginary unit, a complex number whose square is equal to −1.
- I denotes the closed unit interval, which contains all real numbers from 0 to 1, inclusive
- I denotes the identity matrix.
- i is commonly used as an index variable to coordinate vectors or matrices. It is written as a subscript after the indexed element. When used with matrices, it usually indexes rows, in which case columns are usually indexed by j.
- In physics and electronic engineering, I is often the variable for electric current. Sometimes both I and i are used for static and small signal respecively. Therefore the imaginary unit is represented by j instead.
- In programming, i is often used as a generic variable inside of looping constructs.
- In radiocommunication, I is the ITU prefix allocated to Italy.
- In Roman numerals, I denotes the number 1 (there are also separate Unicode characters for this number, 0x2160 "Ⅰ" and 0x2170 "ⅰ").
- In structural engineering I is used for the moment of inertia
- In music,
- the Roman numeral I is the tonic scale degree, chord, or diatonic function, when distinguished I = major and i = minor.
- I is the name of the winner of the Norwegian version of Pop Idol and also World Idol, Kurt Nilsen's debut album. See I (album).
- i is the name of an album by The Magnetic Fields.
- i is the name of a Portuguese post-rock band
- I is the name of a song and EP by Swedish tech metal band, Meshuggah.
- In economics, I is usually used to represent investment.
- In television, i is the television network formerly known as PAX
- Phil and Jim always say it; it means virtually anything, from acknowledging beautiful members of the opposite sex, to a sign of boredom. More commonly between the two, it is a sign of agreement.
See also
Ì, Í, Î, Ï, Ĭ, İ
| Two-letter combinations |
| Ia |
Ib |
Ic |
Id |
Ie |
If |
Ig |
Ih |
Ii |
Ij |
Ik |
Il |
Im |
In |
Io |
Ip |
Iq |
Ir |
Is |
It |
Iu |
Iv |
Iw |
Ix |
Iy |
Iz |
| IA |
IB |
IC |
ID |
IE |
IF |
IG |
IH |
II |
IJ |
IK |
IL |
IM |
IN |
IO |
IP |
IQ |
IR |
IS |
IT |
IU |
IV |
IW |
IX |
IY |
IZ |
| Letter-digit & Digit-letter combinations |
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I0 |
I1 |
I2 |
I3 |
I4 |
I5 |
I6 |
I7 |
I8 |
I9 |
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0I |
1I |
2I |
3I |
4I |
5I |
6I |
7I |
8I |
9I |
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