- This page is about an Italian. If you don't like all the words being in italics then go somewhere else!
Tag, you're it!
—Some random kid
Can you dig it? Well, can you?
It's morbin' time!.
It is the singular, third-person pronoun used in the English language. Not only that, but it is also a page. It is in fact, the title of this page. It can refer to something, anything, everything, and even Chuck Norris. But how can the title of a page be a synonym for Chuck Norris? It doesn't make that much sense. As for the question, it remains, "who is it?".
Ancient Geeks generally conjecture the etymology of the term 'it' to trace its origins to Germanic roots, but we prove that to be false. The veracity of the word 'it' and its origins derive way back from the ancient Dig-It utterance, that is, 'dig-it', which is where the words 'Dig-It', 'dig', and 'it' respectively originate.
Trivia[]
- In the Azerbaijani language, the word 'it' means 'dog'. It, in English, can also refer to a dog. The same thing goes for the Turkish language. Perhaps 'it' is just a synonym for 'dog' for all we know.
- However, in the English language itself, surprisingly, 'it' is also an acronym for 'information technology'. How 'it' can refer to 'information technology' and a 'dog' at the same time is beyond us. 'It' in English also works as an abbreviation for 'Italy' or 'Italian', causing the perplexity itself that surrounds 'it' to intensify increasingly.
- It ain't me.