hwi

See also: hwị

Cornish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Celtic *swīs (compare Breton c’hwi, Welsh chi, Old Irish síi), from Proto-Indo-European *wos.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʍiː/, /ʍəɪ/

Pronoun

hwi

  1. (Standard Written Form) you (formal or plural subject)
    Hwi a welas.
    You (pl.) saw.
  2. you, your (formal or plural enclitic, used to reinforce previous pronoun)
    agas lyver hwi
    your (pl.) book
    Ple ethewgh hwi?
    Where did you (pl.) go?

See also

Cornish personal pronouns
number person independent
(subject)
suffixed infixed possessive
(dependent)
enclitic emphatic reduced
singular first my vy evy ma, a 'm owA
second ty jy, sy1 tejy ta, a 'thM dhaS
third2 m ev ev eev va, a 'n yS
f hi hi hyhi N/A 's hyA
plural first ni ni nyni 'gan, 'n agan, 'gan
second3 hwi hwi hwyhwi 'gas, 's agas, 'gas
third i i ynsi 's agaA, 'gaA

1 Uncommon.
2 hun and ins have been suggested as non-binary 3rd person singular pronouns, though these have not yet officially adopted.
3 Infrequently used as a formal alternative to the singular.

S Triggers soft mutation A Triggers aspirate mutation M Triggers mixed mutation

Kubo

Noun

hwi

  1. water

References

Old English

Adverb

hwī

  1. alternative form of hwȳ

Old Saxon

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *hwī (with what).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /hwiː/

Adverb

hwī

  1. why
    • Heliand, verse 2026-2027
      Te huī sprikis thū thes wīf, sō filu manos mī far thesoro mėnigi?
      Why do you speak of that, woman, so much (you) remind me pressingly in front of this crowd?