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 imanito
 
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							| "I is free" instead of "I am free"? 
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							| what justification can we give to explain the fact that we can write "I is free" instead of "I am free"? thank you so much for your help  :) |  5 Mar 2013      
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| No justification - "I is free" is incorrect   
| I | am | a student. |  
| He | is | a teacher. |  
| She | is | a journalist. |  
| It | is | a book. |  
| We | are | mechanics. |  
| You | are | pilots. |  
| They | are | policemen |  Cheers   Jayho |  5 Mar 2013     
					
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 abitano
 
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							| Unless we think of "I" as the letter. :) 
 
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 Jayho
 
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							| Good point abitano, like in some word games, the letter I is free, it is free |  5 Mar 2013     
					
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 imanito
 
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							| yes I understand but I heard this in a movie adapted from a novel I guess. it was a very formal discourse 
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 imanito
 
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							| If memory serves, I guess the protagonist said " for I is free to do what ....." 
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 Jayho
 
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							| Maybe it is old English - maybe someone who is knowledgeable on old English will know.   Can you remember where you saw it? |  5 Mar 2013     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| If it was a quotation from a person, it could be that person �s own error, and quoted correctly.   Bruce |  5 Mar 2013     
					
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 libertybelle
 
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							| Unfortunately many lousy films use street slang and it wouldn �t surprise me if they used such terrible language as that!! - but I am free
 is the most basic form of TO BE.
 Jayho �s answer above explains it all.
 
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 IbuLulu
 
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							| Was it an African-American character? If so, it could be an example of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) -  �is � would be normal in this vernacular but not in standard varieties of English. |  5 Mar 2013     
					
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 imanito
 
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							| Thank you so much guys for putting my mind into rest. you can �t imagine how frustrated I was trying to search and figure a justification out  you are the best  
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