Jump to content

ĩ

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
ĩ U+0129, ĩ
LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH TILDE
Composition:i [U+0069] + ◌̃ [U+0303]
Ĩ
[U+0128]
Latin Extended-A Ī
[U+012A]

English

[edit]

Letter

[edit]

ĩ

  1. (Early Modern, obsolete) The letter i with a tilde, replacing the sequence in or im.
    — win
    ĩposed — imposed

Kikuyu

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Letter

[edit]

ĩ (upper case Ĩ)

  1. The ninth letter of the Kikuyu alphabet, written in the Latin script.

See also

[edit]

Trivia

[edit]

The use of tilde was apparently due to German philologist Carl Meinhof, after the Lepsius Standard Alphabet.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Derek Raymond Peterson (1 August 2000) Writing Gikuyu: Christian literacy & ethnic debate in Northern Central Kenya 1908–52 (Thesis)‎[1], page 214


Mbya Guarani

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

ĩ

  1. to be (somewhere)
  2. to fit

Conjugation

[edit]
Conjugation of ĩ
singular plural
1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person
inclusive
1st person
exclusive
2nd person 3rd person
xee ndee ereĩ ha'e nhande nhaĩ ore oroĩ peẽ peĩ ha'e

Middle French

[edit]

Letter

[edit]

ĩ

  1. The letter i with a tilde. Used to replace the sequence in or im.
    aĩsi (ainsi) ― thus, so
    ĩpossible (impossible) ― impossible

Old French

[edit]

Letter

[edit]

ĩ

  1. The letter i with a tilde. Used to replace the sequence in or im.
    aĩsiainsithus, so

Vietnamese

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Letter

[edit]

ĩ (upper case Ĩ)

  1. The letter i with the perispomene.

See also

[edit]