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ICH

In German, the pronoun ich denotes the speaker and is used as the subject of a sentence. It is the first-person singular personal pronoun. Its case forms include nominative ich, accusative mich, dative mir, and genitive meiner. The genitive is rare in everyday speech but appears in fixed expressions such as Meiner Meinung nach, meaning "in my opinion."

As the subject of a sentence, ich is used for the speaker. When used as a direct

In psychology and philosophy, the term "Ich" appears as a mode of self-reference. In Freudian psychoanalysis,

Capitalization: In German writing, ich is normally lowercase except at the beginning of a sentence; formal second-person

object,
mich
is
used;
after
prepositions,
the
forms
mir
or
mich
appear
(e.g.,
mit
mir,
ohne
mich).
The
genitive
form
meiner
is
rarely
used;
in
contemporary
German
it
appears
mainly
in
fixed
phrases
such
as
Meiner
Meinung
nach
("in
my
opinion").
das
Ich
denotes
the
ego,
a
mediator
between
impulses
and
external
reality;
it
is
contrasted
with
das
Es
(the
id)
and
das
Über-Ich
(the
superego).
In
philosophy
and
literary
usage,
the
self
is
expressed
with
Ich
in
German
texts,
including
the
famous
phrase
Ich
denke,
also
bin
ich.
Sie
is
capitalized.