## I: The Smallest Word with the Longest History
The English pronoun *I* — a single letter, a single sound — is one of the oldest words in the language. It descends in an unbroken line from Proto-Indo-European *\*éǵh₂*, a pronoun spoken perhaps six thousand years ago, through Proto-Germanic *\*ek*, Old English *ic*, and Middle English *ich*, arriving at its modern form through a process of relentless phonetic reduction that stripped away every consonant and left only a vowel.
The Proto-Indo-European first-person pronoun *\*éǵh₂* is one of the most securely reconstructed words in comparative linguistics. Its reflexes appear across every major branch of the family:
| Branch | Form | Language | |--------|------|----------| | Germanic | *ek, ik* | Gothic, Old Norse, Old English | | Italic | *ego* | Latin | | Hellenic | *egṓ* (ἐγώ) | Ancient Greek | | Indo-Iranian | *aham* (अहम्) | Sanskrit | | Celtic | *mi* | Old Irish | | Slavic | *ja* (я) | Russian, Polish | | Baltic | *aš* | Lithuanian |
The Latin form *ego* entered English as a loanword in the 19th century (via psychology), creating the odd situation where English has two descendants of the same PIE pronoun: the native *I* and the borrowed *ego*. Freud's use of *das Ich* ('the I') in German was translated into English as 'the ego' — using the Latin cousin of the very word it was trying to name.
In Old English, the pronoun was *ic*, pronounced approximately /itʃ/ — close to the modern German *ich*. It appeared in the earliest English texts. The opening of the Old English poem *The Wanderer* (c. 10th century) begins: *Oft ic sceolde āna...* ('Often I had to alone...').
The pronoun had a full case system in Old English: - Nominative: *ic* (I) - Accusative: *mec / me* (me) - Genitive: *mīn* (my/mine) - Dative: *mē* (to me)
The oblique forms *me*, *my*, and *mine* all survive in modern English, but they derive from a different PIE root (*\*me-*) than the nominative *I* (*\*éǵh₂*). This is called suppletion — where different forms of the same paradigm come from entirely different words — and it is a feature shared across Indo-European: Latin *ego* / *me*, Greek *egṓ* / *me*, Sanskrit *aham* / *mām*.
The journey from *ic* to *I* was gradual. During the Middle English period (roughly 1100–1500), the final consonant /tʃ/ weakened and eventually dropped in unstressed positions. Southern dialects retained *ich* longer — Chaucer used both *I* and *ich* — while northern dialects adopted the reduced form earlier.
By the fifteenth century, *I* had become standard in most dialects. The word had undergone maximum phonetic erosion: from a two-phoneme syllable (*ik* or *itʃ*) to a single diphthong (/aɪ/). It is one of the shortest words in the English language, and one of the most frequently used — typically ranking in the top ten words by frequency in any English corpus.
### Why Is It Capitalized?
English is unique among major world languages in capitalizing its first-person singular pronoun. German capitalizes the formal second-person *Sie* but writes *ich* in lowercase. No Romance, Slavic, or Asian language capitalizes its equivalent of 'I'.
The convention arose in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, during the transition from *ich* to *I*. A single lowercase letter — *i* — was easily lost or confused with adjacent strokes in the dense, handwritten manuscripts of the period. Scribes began writing it as a capital for practical legibility. The habit was reinforced by the printing press and eventually codified as a rule
It is worth noting that this capitalization is not a statement of cultural narcissism, as is sometimes claimed. It is an accident of handwriting technology. The word became too small to see, so scribes made it bigger.
Pronouns are among the most stable elements in any language. Content words — nouns, verbs, adjectives — are borrowed, coined, and replaced constantly, but the basic pronouns resist change for millennia. The English *I* has been in continuous use for over 1,300 years in written records and descends from a form at least 6,000 years old.
When you say 'I', you are using a word that connects you — through an unbroken chain of speakers, across a hundred generations — to the people who first spoke Proto-Indo-European on the Pontic steppe. The word has changed its sound, lost its consonants, gained a capital letter, but it has never stopped meaning what it meant at the beginning: the self, speaking.