Definition us
Etymology 1
From Middle English us, from Old English ūs (“us”, dative personal pronoun), from Proto-Germanic *uns (“us”), from Proto-Indo-European *ne-, *nō-, *n-ge-, *n-sme- (“us”). Cognate with West Frisian us, ús (“us”), Low German us (“us”), Dutch ons (“us”), German uns (“us”), Danish os (“us”), Latin nōs (“we, us”).
Pronoun
us
- (personal) Me and at least one other person; the objective case of we.
- (colloquial) Me.
- (Northern England) Our.
Determiner
us
- The speakers/writers, or the speaker/writer and at least one other person.
Etymology 2
Derived from the similarity between the letter u and the Greek letter µ.
Symbol
us
- Alternative spelling of µs: microsecond
Etymology 3
Noun
us
- plural of u