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o

noun

  1. letter
  2. something resembling the letter O
  3. zero
L20831 on Wikidata ↗

particle

  1. vocative particle
L623959 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /oʊ/ / [ˈoː˦] / [ˈo] / /əʊ/ / /ʌ/

adj

Etymology: From Hokkien 烏 /乌 (o͘, “black”) or Teochew 烏 /乌 (ou¹, “black”).

  1. With sugar and no condensed milk added.

    Better try their kopi-o tarik. Our version nowadays taste like cough medicine. LOL!

character

  1. The fifteenth letter of the English alphabet, called o and written in the Latin script.

    "Supposing somebody sees you, with all those flowers too? Supposing somebody writes him a letter? Ooooh!" (a pure round open Tamil O.)

intj

  1. Alternative form of oh.

name

Etymology: From Mandarin 鄂 (È) Wade–Giles romanization: O⁴.

  1. A surname from Mandarin Chinese.
  2. Alternative form of E (Ancient Chinese Kingdom)

    ACCORDING to various inscriptions about this famous temple we are told that it was erected to the memory of Ya Fei, "An Unswerving Guardian to the Heir-Apparent," of the Sung dynasty; "A Loyal-to-the-end Minister," who came from the ancient state of O-Kuo, the present Wu Ch'ang-fu of Hupei; and that it was erected by the Emperor Hsiao Tsung as an atonement for the weakness and follies of his father, Kao Tsung, toward a faithful servant of the empire who came to his untimely death through the diabolical schemes of men in high estate. Moreover, that after his death and burial, when the empire came to appreciate his great services to the people, the posthumous title of " Prince of O-Kuo" was bestowed upon his sacred memory.

    In ancient times Wuchang was the capital city of the Kingdom of O. In Manchu times it was the residence of the Viceroy of the two provinces of Hupeh and Hunan. Since then its fortunes have changed with changing politics.

noun

Etymology: Abbreviation.

  1. American Library Association abbreviation of octavo, a book size (20-25 cm).
  2. Someone associated with Leyton Orient Football Club, as a player, coach, supporter etc.
  3. The number of overs bowled.
  4. Orgasm.

    Sunny felt some cold and wet press against her pussy, it startled her, then it's^([sic]) tongue went deep inside of her, she had been eaten out before, but never this could, who ever was doing it was a real pro, and had to have the longest tongue in the world it was buried at least three inches inside of her and was taking long, hard strokes, it was trying to get even deeper, it was only seconds before she started shaking from her first O.

    Further on, when she's about to reach her first O, the taste turns from no taste to champagne-like.

  5. Opium.

    We lay on our stomachs on the living-room floor in a circle around our host, a skinny little man who said he'd been smoking O for 20 years.

num

  1. The fifteenth numeral symbol of the English alphabet, called o and written in the Latin script.

particle

Etymology: From Middle English O, o, from Old English o, from Latin o and Ancient Greek ὦ (ô, interjection). Featured prominently in William Tyndale's 1525 translation of the New Testament.

  1. The vocative particle, used for direct address.

    O Death! O Death! Won't you spare me over till another year? - part of the refrain from the American folk song "A Conversation with Death".

    Therfore arte thou inexcuſable o man whoſoever thou be that iudgeſt. For in that ſame where in thou iudgeſt another / thou cõdemneſt thy ſilfe. For thou that iudgeſt doest evẽ the ſame ſilfe thynges. […] Thynkeſt thou O man that iudgeſt them which do ſoche thyngꝭ and yet doſt evẽ the very ſame / that thou ſhalt eſcape the iudgemẽt of God?

prep

Etymology: See o'.

  1. Alternative form of of.