אָ֣נִי

𐤀𐤍𐤉

ʼănîy

I

First person singular independent pronoun meaning 'I' or 'me.' It identifies the speaker as the subject, object, or agent of an action or situation. While most commonly indicating the individual self in narrative, discourse, or prayer, it may sometimes appear with emphatic, contrastive, or reflexive nuances. The form may also be pleonastic (adding emphasis or clarity), and in poetic or formal speech may occur in parallel with the longer form אָנֹכִי (anokhî).

Ine "I (myself), me" (Bemba)

H589

Isaiah 49:18 · Word #10

Lexicon H589

Lemmaאֲנִי
Lemma (Paleo)𐤀𐤍𐤉
Transliterationʼănîy
Strong'sH589
DefinitionFirst person singular independent pronoun meaning 'I' or 'me.' It identifies the speaker as the subject, object, or agent of an action or situation. While most commonly indicating the individual self in narrative, discourse, or prayer, it may sometimes appear with emphatic, contrastive, or reflexive nuances. The form may also be pleonastic (adding emphasis or clarity), and in poetic or formal speech may occur in parallel with the longer form אָנֹכִי (anokhî).

Morphology HPp1cs All morphology codes

Part of Speech P — Pronoun — Substitutes for a noun
Subtype p — Personal — Personal pronoun
Person 1 — 1st person — First person ("I" / "we")
Gender c — Common — Common (both genders)
Number s — Singular — Singular

Common Translation

PhraseI

SIBI-P1 Translation H589-01

I

Morphological NotesIndependent personal pronoun, 1st person common singular (HPp1cs).
Rendering RationaleThis is the first person singular independent personal pronoun identifying the speaker as the subject or agent. The rendering "I" preserves its singular, common-gender form and core self-referential force without adding contextual nuance.

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SILEX v2

Bantu Hebrew

אָ֣נִי (ʼănîy) — First person singular independent pronoun meaning 'I' or 'me.' It identifies the speaker as the subject, object, or agent of an action or situation. While most commonly indicating the individual self in narrative, discourse, or prayer, it may sometimes appear with emphatic, contrastive, or reflexive nuances. The form may also be pleonastic (adding emphasis or clarity), and in poetic or formal speech may occur in parallel with the longer form אָנֹכִי (anokhî).

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Word Meaning Language
Ine I (myself), me Bemba