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Ольга
Why the pronoun "I" in English is always written from a capital letter?
2012년 6월 18일 오후 7:57
답변 · 8
6
The letter I is capitalized in an English sentence when it is used as a word to refer to the person writing. Proper (personal) names of people, places, and things are capitalized in English grammar. The word "I" is a personal pronoun; its function is to take the place of the name of the person doing the writing.
2012년 6월 18일
6
If it's not capitalised, we simply miss it in reading. It's a single letter, remember?
2012년 6월 18일
1
I think we lost that knowledge, maybe it is just a shared wishful
thought to express that 'I am important'.
In my language (Italian) we say /or/ with the very humble /o/, and a lot of people are replacing it with the wrong term /piuttosto/ just to
make it sound big!
Actually I think Peachey is right, but I am just guessing.
2012년 6월 18일
I have always believed that what Peachey said is right.
It began to be capitalized c.1250 to mark it as a distinct word and avoid misreading in handwritten manuscripts.
with thanks to etymology online.com for that little quote.
2012년 6월 18일
Why not he, she, it, we, they and just I? Good question. I think because it looks better when capitalized.
2012년 6월 18일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!



