i

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BabylonEnglish English dictionaryDownload this dictionary
i
n. ninth letter of the English alphabet
 
I
n. first person pronoun used to designate one's self
 
n. number 1 (Roman Numerals)
 
n. (Japanese) Inoshishi, "boar", Chinese zodiac sign


Wikipedia English The Free EncyclopediaDownload this dictionary
I
The lowercase "i" redirects here. This article is about a letter. For other uses, see I (disambiguation). Due to technical restrictions, ı, the lowercase dotless i, redirects here.I is the ninth letter of the Latin alphabet. Its name in English is i .
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Í
(i-acute) is a letter of FaroeseHungarianIcelandicCzechSlovak, and Tatar language. This letter also appears in CatalanIrishOccitanPortugueseSpanish, and Vietnamese language as a variant of letter “i”.
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Î
(i-circumflex) is a letter of Kurdish and Romanian language. This letter also appears in French and Walon language as a variant of letter “i”.
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Decimal I (Cyrillic)
I (І, і) (also called dotted I) is a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet, used in the orthographies of the BelarusianKazakh and Ukrainian languages. It represents the vowel sound , and is the equivalent of the letter И as used in Russian and other languages. It is derived from the Greek letter iota (Ι, ι, representing ).
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Grave accent
The grave accent ( ` ) is a diacritical mark used in written CatalanFrenchGreek until 1982 (polytonic orthography), ItalianNorwegianOccitanPortugueseScottish GaelicVietnameseWelsh, and other languages.The word grave is derived from the Latin gravis (heavy). In English the word is normally pronounced "grahv", IPA , not like grave meaning "serious" or a "tomb." It comes from French, where it is pronounced similarly: accent grave .
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I*
i* (pronounced "i star") or i* framework is a modeling language suitable for an early phase of system modeling in order to understand the problem domain. i* modeling language allows to model both as-is and to-be situations. The name i* refers to the notion of distributed intentionality which underlines the framework. It is an approach originally developed for modelling and reasoning about organizational environments and their information systems composed of heterogeneous actors with different, often competing, goals that depend on each other to undertake their tasks and achieve these goals. It covers both actor-oriented and goal-oriented modeling. i* model answers the question WHO and WHY, not what.
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Iodide
"i-" redirects here. For the Internet-related prefix i-, see Wiktionary's entry . An iodide ion is an iodine atom with a −1  charge. Compounds with iodine in formal oxidation state −1 are called iodides. This can include ionic compounds such as caesium iodide or covalent compounds such as carbon tetraiodide. This is the same naming scheme as is seen with chlorides and bromides The chemical test for an iodide compound is to acidify the aqueous compound by adding some drops of acid, to dispel any carbonate ions present, then adding lead nitrate, yielding a bright yellow precipitate of lead iodide. Most ionic iodides are soluble, with the exception of yellow silver iodide and yellow lead iodide. Iron(III) iodide does not exist because iron(III) ions oxidize iodide ions in aqueous solution. Aqueous solutions of iodide dissolve iodine better than pure water due to the formation of complex ions:I−(aq) + I2(s) I3−(aq)
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Turkish dotted and dotless I
The Turkish alphabet, which is a variant of the Latin alphabet, includes two distinct versions of the letter I, one dotted and the other dotless.I ı is the letter which describes the close back unrounded vowel sound . Neither the upper nor lower case version has a dot.İ i describes the variant close front unrounded vowel sound . Both the upper and lower case versions have a dot.
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Umlaut (diacritic)
The umlaut mark (or simply umlaut) and the diaeresis mark (or simply diaeresis) or trema are two diacritics consisting of a pair of dots placed over a letter. When the vowel is an i, the diacritic replaces the tittle. The two diacritics are very similar in appearance, and the distinction between them is not always made.
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iMedixDownload this dictionary
I
I incisor ; iodine ; inosine ; isoleucine. I / I / electric current. I 1. The symbol for the element iodine. 2. i The symbol for current. [more]I - Community and Resources

WordNet 2.0 DictionaryDownload this dictionary
I
Noun
1. a nonmetallic element belonging to the halogens; used especially in medicine and photography and in dyes; occurs naturally only in combination in small quantities (as in sea water or rocks)
(synonym) iodine, iodin, atomic number 53
(hypernym) chemical element, element
(hyponym) iodine-131
(substance-holonym) seawater, saltwater, brine
2. the smallest whole number or a numeral representing this number; "he has the one but will need a two and three to go with it"; "they had lunch at one"
(synonym) one, 1, ace, single, unity
(hypernym) digit, figure
(hyponym) monad, monas
3. the 9th letter of the Roman alphabet
(hypernym) letter, letter of the alphabet, alphabetic character
(member-holonym) Roman alphabet, Latin alphabet

 
i
Adjective
1. used of a single unit or thing; not two or more; "`ane' is Scottish"
(synonym) one, 1, ane
(similar) cardinal


BabylonGerman English dictionaryDownload this dictionary
I (das)
n. i, ninth letter of the English alphabet
 
i. (in)
in, into; within; inside

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