immo

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1)  fixed asset

Etymology
May be for, from. Otherwise the ablative singular of with unexpected geminate /mm/, or conflated therewith.

Some comparativists, including Götze & Pedersen (1934) and more recently Kimball (1999) and Kloekhorst (2008), have compared 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬, hieroglyphic. The details of this connection are unclear at best, but if valid it would point to common inheritance from. E.g., Kimball suggests to reconstruct, comparing the second element with 🇨🇬. A major problem with this etymology is that the preservation of the geminate /mm/ all the way from PIE to Classical Latin is an unknown phenomenon.

Adverb

 * 1)  aye, yes of course, certainly, indeed, instead
 * 2)  to the contrary, in no way, by no means
 * 3)  yes, what is more, even
 * 4) * vīvit? immō in senātum venit;
 * 5) * "Is he alive? Yes, and what is more he is coming into the Senate!"