What is the meaning of Mi?

ISO 639-1 language code for Maori.

A syllable used in sol-fa (solfège) to represent the third note of a major scale.

Alternative form of mi. .

to come

bone

louse

water

water

louse

louse

louse

water

by us, of us

Our—exclusive of person spoken to.

noon, midday

my (first-person singular possessive)

to be (precedes the adjective or adverb)

mine; first-person masculine singular possessive pronoun

my

Manuel de Codage transliteration of mj.

First person singular prepositional pronoun; me

I, me (first-person pronoun; refers to the person speaking)

louse

rice plant

rice

louse

I; first-person singular personal pronoun, nominative case

louse

have

cat

I (first person singular)

me

my

louse

we (first-person plural personal pronoun)

you (second-person plural personal pronoun)

me (first-person singular personal object pronoun)

us (first-person plural personal object pronoun)

you (second-person plural personal object pronoun)

ripe, mature

wall

Alternative form of mikä

louse

I

me

my

I; we (both singular and plural first-person pronoun, usually not as the object of the verb)

I, me, my

louse

what?

whatever

whatever

root

offshoot

vein

nerve bundle

tendon, sinew

second person plural independent pronoun

four

what?

which?

ground, land, dirt

me (dative of ik)

me (accusative of ik)

Charles V. J. Russ (editor): The Dialects of Modern German: A Linguistic survey. First published in 1990, reprinted 2000, page 61, note (e): „[...] southern Westphalian dialects, alone of the Low German dialects, do distinguish acc. mik and dik from dat. mi and di.“

Ein Sohn der rothen Erde (a son of the red earth): Niu lustert mol! Plattdeutsche Erzählungen und Anekdoten im Paderborner Dialekt. Celle, 1870, page 7: „Fürwörter. Die persönlichen lauten: ik, meyner, mey, mik; diu oder du, deyner, dey, dik [...]“. Translation: „Pronouns. The personal pronouns are: ik, (genitive) meyner, (dative) mey, (accusative) mik; diu or du, deyner, dey, dik [...])“

what

prepositional form of iou: me

Nonstandard spelling of .

Nonstandard spelling of .

Nonstandard spelling of .

Nonstandard spelling of .

louse

louse

accusative/dative of ic

First-person singular genitive determiner: my.

me

me

louse

louse

louse

water

louse

fire

I, me (first-person singular pronoun)

feminine singular of min

feminine singular of min

mi, a syllable used in solfège to represent the seventh note of a major scale.

I (first-person singular pronoun)

accusative/dative of ik

Alternative form of mir, dative singular of ih

dative/accusative of ik

my

I; me (singular first-person pronoun)

my

louse

I/me (first-person singular pronoun)

louse

louse

louse

louse

me

to me, me

Alternative form of me

water

louse

louse

we (masculine plural, more than two)

I

me

my

Romanization of 𒈪

bear

what

me

louse

what (interrogative)

than (in comparisons)

louse

louse

person, human being

my

mouse

me (accusative)

myself

me

I, me, my

ᨆᨗ: which means only, e.g. ᨉᨘᨕᨆᨗ /duaːmi/ means only two.

me; post preposition form of jo

mi (third note of diatonic scale)

mu; the Greek alphabet letter Μ (lowercase μ)

second-person singular imperative of mirar

me

clitic dative of

mi

I, the one who is speaking, me, myself

you

Alternative form of mikä (what) (especially as a relative pronoun)

mi, the note 'E'

me

to me

myself

I

unstressed form of meu and miña: my

mi

E (the musical note or key)

we

what?

something, anything, nothing

what?

how …!, what (a) …!

mi (a syllable used in solfège to represent the third note of a major scale)

noodle

mi, a syllable used in sol-fa (solfège) to represent the third note of a major scale.

my

clitic accusative of io. me

clitic dative of io. (to) me

Used as ethical dative.

the third note, mi

E (musical note or key)

mu (Greek letter)

The hiragana syllable (mi) or the katakana syllable (mi) in Hepburn romanization.

vocative masculine singular of meus

Syncopated form of mihī̆, dative of egō

I, me

noodle

Object case of ik: me, myself

I, me, my.

I

dative singular mute of ja

Alternative form of my

mi (musical note)

Obsolete form of mim.

mi, the note 'E'.

first-person singular pronoun; I, me

we (nominative plural of (I))

we (vocative plural of (I))

to me (clitic dative singular of (I))

my, of mine (clitic dative singular of (I))

dative of ja

Apocopic form of mío, my

mu; the Greek letter Μ, μ

I, me. First person pronoun; refers to the person speaking.

Used to form interrogatives.

eyelashes

you (second person singular pronoun, referring to a person held in low esteem)

you (second person singular pronoun)

mi (third note of diatonic scale)

to kiss

me

my

I, me

used with inflected verbs to mark affirmative statements.

The name of the Latin-script letter M/m.

me (first-person singular non-honorific object pronoun following a high-tone monosyllabic verb)

me (first-person singular non-honorific object pronoun following a low- or mid-tone monosyllabic verb)

my (first-person singular possessive pronoun)

to breathe

to shake

to swallow

to move

to oscillate

Alternative form of mo (I)

The syllable used to represent the high-tone and its diacritic (´)

pubic hair

Combining stem of mina.

to be standing

Source: wiktionary.org