Ibex, ibis, iceberg, icicle, igloo, inn, insect, invoice, iris, iron, island and ivy are things. They begin with the letter i.
'I' is the 9th letter in the alphabet.'M' is the 13th letter in the alphabet.? ? ?
9, nine, 9th.
Yes. I is the 9th letter in the alphabet.
Independence
The Latin alphabet was first used for English around the 8th or 9th Century. The modern 26-Letter alphabet was in use by 1634.
a - the 1st letter of the Roman alphabet b - the 2nd letter of the Roman alphabet c - the 3rd letter of the Roman alphabet d - the 4th letter of the Roman alphabet e - the 5th letter of the Roman alphabet f - the 6th letter of the Roman alphabet g - the 7th letter of the Roman alphabet h - the 8th letter of the Roman alphabet i - the 9th letter of the Roman alphabet j - the 10th letter of the Roman alphabet k - the 11th letter of the Roman alphabet l - the 12th letter of the Roman alphabet m - the 13th letter of the Roman alphabet n - the 14th letter of the Roman alphabet o - the 15th letter of the Roman alphabet p - the 16th letter of the Roman alphabet q - the 17th letter of the Roman alphabet r - the 18th letter of the Roman alphabet s - the 19th letter of the Roman alphabet t - the 20th letter of the Roman alphabet u - the 21st letter of the Roman alphabet v - the 22nd letter of the Roman alphabet double-u, w - the 23rd letter of the Roman alphabet x, ex - the 24th letter of the Roman alphabet wye, y - the 25th letter of the Roman alphabet ezed, izzard, zed, zee, z - the 26th letter of the Roman alphabet; "the British call Z zed and the Scots call it ezed but Americans call it zee"; "he doesn't know A from izzard"
it is the 9th letter of the Greek alphabet [ Ιι ] < upper & lower case
In the 9th Century BCE.
English has only ever had 2 alphabets in its History. The First was the Futhark alphabet, which was replaced by the Latin alphabet in the 9th Century. Today we still use the Latin alphabet.
It was created in the 9th century by Bulgarians.
Old English borrowed the Latin alphabet (which we use today) around the 9th Century.
In about the 9th Century, Old English switched from the Futhark Alphabet to the Latin alphabet, which is what we use today.