hic

Etymology
.

Interjection

 * 1) An approximation to the sound of a hiccup, used e.g. to indicate drunkenness.
 * "This wine - hic! - tasted good."

Translations

 * Bulgarian: хлъц, хълцук
 * Czech:
 * Dutch:
 * German: ,
 * Ukrainian: ик
 * Vietnamese:, híc, , hix, hức

Etymology
From. Compare 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) fig (tree) or fig (fruit)

Etymology 1
From.

Noun

 * 1) snag, hitch, catch, kink, problem

Etymology 2
.

Interjection

 * 1) ! (indicating a hiccup)

Adverb

 * 1) here

Etymology 1
From older, from , from +. Reconstructed forms with o are made likely by the Old Latin form.

The feminine and neuter inflected forms were created in analogy to. In the Italic languages only Faliscan has a clear cognate inflected pronoun:. A petrified form may be present in the Umbrian word for "the same": ,

In Indo-European the first element is cognate with 🇨🇬 ~, , 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. The second element is cognate with 🇨🇬,, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. More at,.

Pronunciation

 * Note: before a vowel, the original single final [k] is often but not always doubled by Classical and later poets by analogy with
 * Note: before a vowel, the original single final [k] is often but not always doubled by Classical and later poets by analogy with

Adjective

 * 1) this; these

Pronoun

 * 1) this one; this (thing); these ones ; these (things); he, she, it

Declension

 * In Medieval Latin pl. fem. hae through some vulgar form, *haeae, is replaced by hee.
 * When combined with the interrogative clitic, an i is restored at the end of the word: hicine, haecine, hocine, etc.

Usage notes

 * This demonstrative adjective/pronoun is used to refer to a person or thing, or persons or things, near the speaker. It contrasts with, which refers to people or things far from the speaker and the listener, and , which refers to people or things near the listener.
 * As Latin had no person pronouns specifically meaning "he", "she" or "it", any of, , or (most frequently)  could assume that function.
 * In Vulgar Latin, phonetic changes tended to eliminate both the initial h and final c, leaving nothing but a bare vowel. Consequently, this demonstrative gradually disappeared and was replaced with, which originally meant "that (near you)". (This left only a two-term system of demonstratives in comparison with Latin's three-term system, but the gap was filled in some areas by pressing into service as a middle demonstrative. Spanish, for example, has  < Latin ,  < Latin , and  < Latin .) This process was gradual, and the neuter form  survived the longest (it still survives, for example, in 🇨🇬). Other forms sometimes survived in compound expressions, e.g. 🇨🇬 < Latin.

Etymology 2
From older, adverb (locative) from.

Adverb

 * 1) here, in or at this place

Descendants

 * >? Italo-Romance:
 * Padanian:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Gallo-Romance:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Ibero-Romance:
 * Borrowings:
 * Borrowings:
 * Borrowings:
 * Borrowings:

Etymology
Onomatopoeia, from the sobbing sound. Compare.

Interjection

 * 1)  sob