释义 |
- used as the subject of a verb when the speaker or writer is referring to himself/herself(指称自己,作动词的主语)我
- I think I'd better go now.我想我最好现在就走。
- When they asked me if I wanted the job, I said yes.他们问我是否想要那份工作,我说想。
- He and I are old friends.他和我是老朋友。
- I'm not going to fall, am I?我不会摔倒的,对吧?
- I'm taller than her, aren't I?我比她高,是吧?
- Jen and I went to London yesterday.珍和我昨天去了伦敦。
In informal spoken English people sometimes say ‘Jen and me went…’, which is wrong because the subject pronoun I is needed in this position. This sometimes leads people to use ‘and I’ in the phrase ‘between you and I’, which is also wrong, because the object pronoun me is needed after the preposition between: Between you and me… see also me词源pronoun Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ik and German ich, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin ego and Greek egō.
I noun /aɪ/ /aɪ/ (also i) [countable, uncountable] (plural Is, I’s, i’s /aɪz/ /aɪz/ ) Idioms - the 9th letter of the English alphabet英语字母表的第 9 个字母
- ‘Island’ begins with (an) I/‘I’.island 一词以字母 i 开头。
词源pronoun Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ik and German ich, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin ego and Greek egō.
Idioms dot your i’s and cross your t’s - to pay attention to the small details when you are finishing a task(完成任务时)一丝不苟,注重细节
I symbol /aɪ/ /aɪ/ (also i) - the number 1 in Roman numerals(罗马数字)1
词源pronoun Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ik and German ich, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin ego and Greek egō.
I abbreviation /aɪ/ /aɪ/ (also I.) - (especially on maps) Island(s); isle(尤用于地图)岛,群岛
词源pronoun Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ik and German ich, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin ego and Greek egō.
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