The correct spelling of the phrase "am visible" is /[æm ˈvɪzəbəl]/. The first word, "am," is spelled with the letter "a" and the letter "m," and is pronounced with a short vowel sound /æ/. The second word, "visible," is spelled with the letters "v," "i," "s," "i," "b," "l," and is pronounced with the stress on the second syllable and the "i" sounds pronounced as a short /ɪ/ sound. Together, "am visible" means that something or someone is able to be seen.
The phrase "am visible" is not a word in itself but rather a combination of the verb "am", which is the first-person singular present tense of the verb "to be", and the adjective "visible". Therefore, its etymology can be traced back to the Old English language.
The verb "to be" has a long history in the English language and can be traced back to Proto-Germanic, an ancestral language from which English, German, Dutch, and other Germanic languages emerged. In Old English, the first-person singular form of the verb "to be" was "eom", which eventually evolved into "am". The word "visible" comes from the Latin word "visibilis", meaning "that can be seen".