iam

Etymology
From.

Adverb

 * 1) sometime, ever (indeterminate correlative of time)
 * 2) once
 * 3) * 2000, Antoine de Saint Exupéry, La Eta Princo, translated by Pierre Delaire from the French
 * "eo"

- Iam, kiam mi estis sesjara, mi vidis belegan bildon en iu libro pri la praarbaro, titolita "Travivitaj rakontoj".

Etymology
From, acc.sg.f. of. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬,, 🇨🇬 (🇨🇬), 🇨🇬 (🇨🇬).

Adverb

 * 1) already
 * 2) now
 * 3) anymore
 * 4) soon
 * 5)  now, again, moreover, once more
 * 1) anymore
 * 2) soon
 * 3)  now, again, moreover, once more
 * 1)  now, again, moreover, once more

Usage notes
means, generally, “at some point previous” or “since some point previous”. In English,, the most common translation, is used only to emphasize that this point might have been expected to be later, whereas is used to emphasize that the statement was once false, even when the statement refers to a point in the past or future. is used to express either. (Likewise, the most common Latin word for, , denotes only the literal present moment.) Also, where means , it is often used in negative sentences, in which the most common English construction uses.

However, note that when is strengthened as "iam iam" or "iam nunc", the meaning shifts to the present and has a meaning equivalent to.

Etymology
From, through elision of /m/.