Ic (IPA: /ɪtʃ/) was the first-person, singular, personal pronoun (subject case) in Old English. Grammatical person, in Linguistics, is deictic reference to a participant in an event such as the speaker the Addressee, or others In linguistics grammatical number is a Grammatical category of nouns pronouns and adjective and verb agreement that expresses count distinctions (such as "one" Personal pronouns are Pronouns used as substitutes for proper or common Nouns. The nominative case is a Grammatical case for a Noun, which generally marks the subject of a Verb, as opposed to its object or other
Modern scholars write this word iċ, to mark that the c is pronounced like ch in church (IPA: [tʃ]).
The whole word would probably have sounded something like Modern English each.
| Nominative | Accusative | Dative | Genitive | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Singular | ic | me(c) | me | min | |
| Dual | wit | unc | uncer | |||
| Plural | we | us | ure | |||
| 2nd | Singular | þu | þe | þin | ||
| Dual | git | inc | incer | |||
| Plural | ge | eow | eower | |||
| 3rd | Singular | Masculine | he | hine | him | his |
| Neuter | hit | hit | him | his | ||
| Feminine | heo | hie | hire | hire | ||
| Plural | hie | hie | him | hira | ||
| Nominative | Accusative | Dative | Genitive | |||