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Whats the difference between Im and I am? [closed] 2 'I'm' is merely a contraction of 'I am' From Wikipedia: A contraction is a shortened version of the written and spoken forms of a word, syllable, or word group, created by omission of internal letters (actually, sounds)
prepositions - Does the phrase whos in? or Im in! exist in . . . 1 "I'm in" is an alternate form of "count me in" which means "include me" This is similar to the poker phrase "deal me in", but I don't know which came first or if one was derived from the other Similarly, "I'm out" is an alternate form of "count me out" which means "exclude me"
What exactly is Imma? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In practice in US speech, what's written as I'm going to, or as I'm gonna, is pronounced somewhere around 'amənə , with 3 syllables, the last two unstressed In rapid speech, the second nucleus deletes and the two nasals assimilate to a long m , leaving 'ammə That's pretty normal in whitebread American English faspeech, not just AAVE
Im done or Ive done - English Language Usage Stack Exchange When someone asks whether you have completed a task e g shopping, dinner What should be your answer? I am done or I have done To me, the former sentence's formation, Sub + VBe+ Past Partici
Origin of the phrase Im on it - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I’m on it, I want you to know I’m no feather-bed soldier (1833) Bear in mind that I'm on it may well be a shortened version of I'm on the case about which Green says that it means: (orig US) whether in one’s personal or professional life, working or acting efficiently, controlling a situation, ‘taking care of business’
How prevalent is Im game compared to Im in? Don't know about American English but very common in British English to mean yes, I'll join in or yes, I'll do that I'm up for that is also commonplace
Im well vs. Im good vs. Im doing well, etc For “I’m well”, there is well (adjective) 1b: being in satisfactory condition or circumstances For “I’m good”, there is good (adjective) 2e: free from infirmity or sorrow For “I’m doing good”, there is good (adverb) 1: WELL So they all seem fine to me
I am on it vs. I am at it - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I am on it in your first example sounds like a shortened version of I’m on the case, a colloquial way of saying that the speaker is dealing with it In the context of some kind of dispute, as in your second example, they’re at it again means that they have started doing again whatever it was that was a component in the dispute
Im home or Im at home - English Language Usage Stack Exchange 4 I think the implication in the expression "I'm home" is that you're home from somewhere It may, as Mitch says, be that you've just come gone in, but it doesn't need to be — you can be home from the front or home from university and have been back for a week or so But a homecoming in the not-too-distant past is certainly connoted