O

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  • noun. The 15th letter of the modern English alphabet.
  • noun. Any of the speech sounds represented by the letter o.
  • noun. The 15th in a series.
  • noun. Something shaped like the letter O.
  • noun. One of the four major blood groups in the ABO system. Individuals with this blood group have neither A nor B antigens on the surface of their red blood cells, and have both anti-A and anti-B antibodies in their blood serum.
  • noun. A zero.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • An abbreviated form of on. Commonly written o'.
  • Same as one.
  • Same as a, the indefinite article.
  • An abbreviated form of of, now commonly written o'.
  • A prefix common in Irish surnames, equivalent to Mac-in Gaelic and Irish surnames (see Mac), meaning ‘son,’ as in O'Brien, O'Connor, O'Donnell, O'Sullivan, son of Brien, Connor, Donnell, etc.
  • noun. An exclamation or lamentation.
  • noun. Same as ho.
  • The usual “connecting vowel,” properly the stem-vowel of the first element, of compound words taken or formed from the Greek, as in acr-o-lith, chrys-o-prase, mon-o-tone, prot-o-martyr, etc.
  • An abbreviation
  • in electricity, of ohm;
  • of Ohio;
  • of only;
  • of opening of the circuit;
  • in psychology, of observer.
  • The fifteenth letter and fourth vowel in our alphabet.
  • It thus appears that the belief, not uncommonly held, that O represents, and is imitated from, the rounded position of the lips in its utterance, is a delusion. The historical value of the letter (as already noticed) is that of our o, in note, etc., whether of both long and short quantities, as in Latin and the earliest Greek, or of short only, as in Greek after the addition to that alphabet of a special sign for long o (namely omega, Ω, ω). This vowel-sound, the name-sound of o, is found in English usage only with long quantity in accented syllables. There is no closely corresponding short vowel in standard English, but only in dialectal pronunciation, as in the New England utterance of certain words (much varying in number in different individuals): for example, home, whole, none. What we call “short o” (in not, on, etc.) is a sound of altogether different quality, very near to a true short ä (that is, a short utterance corresponding to the a of arm, father), but verging slightly toward the “broad” a (â) or o (ô) of laud, lord. “Short o” has a marked tendency to take on a “broader” sound, especially before r, and especially in America: hence the use, in the respellings of this work, of ô, which varies in different mouths from the full sound of â to that of ŏ. After these three values of the character, the next most common one is that of the oo-sonnd, the original and proper sound of u (represented in this work by ö), as in move, with the nearly corresponding short sound (marked u) in a few words, as wolf, woman. All these vowel-sounds partake of what is usually called a “labial” or a “rounded” character: that is to say, there is involved in their utterance a rounding and closing movement of the lips (and, it is held, of the whole mouth-cavity), in different degrees — least of all in ŏ, more and more in â, ō, u, ö; in the last, carried to its extreme, no closer rounding and approximation being possible. The labial action helps to give the vowel-sounds in question their fully distinctive character; but it can be more or less slighted without leaving them unrecognizable, and, in the generally indifferent habit of English pronunciation, is in a degree neglected, even in accented syllables, and yet more in unaccented. Our “long ō,” it should be added, regularly ends with a vanishing sound of oo (ö), as our ā with one of ē. O also has in many words the value of the “neutral” vowels of hut, hurt: for example, in son, come, love, work. O is further a member of several very common and important digraphs: thus, oo, the most marked representative of the ö-sound (in moon, rood, etc.), but also pronounced as u (book, look, etc.) and ŭ (blood, etc.); ou (in certain situations ow), oftenest representing a real diphthong (in out, sound, now, etc.), but also a variety of other sounds (as in through, could, ought, rough); oi (in certain situations oy), standing for a real diphthongal sound of which the first element is the “broad” o- or a-sound (for example, point, boy); oa (load, etc.), having the “long” o-sound; others, as eo (variously pronounced, as in people, yeoman, jeopard), oe (in foe, does, etc.), are comparatively rare.
  • As a medieval Roman numeral, 11.
  • As a symbol: In medieval musical notation, the sign of the tempus perfectum — that is, of triple rhythm. See mensurable music, under mensurable.
  • In modern musical notation, a null (which see)
  • In chem., the symbol of oxygen.
  • In logic, the symbol of the particular negative proposition. See A, 2 .
  • An abbreviation: Of old: as, in O. H. G., Old High German; O. T., Old Testament.
  • Of the Middle Latin octavius, a pint.
  • [lowercase] In a ship's log-book, of overcast.
  • Pl. o's, oes (ōz). Anything circular or approximately so, as resembling the shape of the letter o, as a spangle, the circle of a theater, the earth, etc.
  • An arithmetical cipher; zero: so called from its form.
  • A common interjection expressing surprise, pain, gladness, appeal, entreaty, invocation, lament, etc., according to the manner of utterance and the circumstances of the case.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • adjective. One.
  • noun. The letter O, or its sound.
  • noun. Something shaped like the letter O; a circle or oval.
  • noun. A cipher; zero.
  • O, the fifteenth letter of the English alphabet, derives its form, value, and name from the Greek O, through the Latin. The letter came into the Greek from the Phœnician, which possibly derived it ultimately from the Egyptian. Etymologically, the letter o is most closely related to a, e, and u; as in E. bone, AS. bān; E. stone, AS. stān; E. broke, AS. brecan to break; E. bore, AS. beran to bear; E. dove, AS. dūfe; E. toft, tuft; tone, tune; number, F. nombre.
  • Among the ancients, O was a mark of triple time, from the notion that the ternary, or number 3, is the most perfect of numbers, and properly expressed by a circle, the most perfect figure.
  • interjection. An exclamation used in calling or directly addressing a person or personified object; also, as an emotional or impassioned exclamation expressing pain, grief, surprise, desire, fear, etc.
  • interjection. exclamations expressive of various emotions, but usually promoted by surprise, consternation, grief, pain, etc.
  • interjection. undefined
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. The fifteenth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet.
  • noun. close-mid back rounded vowel
  • noun. The fifteenth letter of the English alphabet, called o and written in the Latin script.
  • noun. The ordinal number fifteenth, derived from this letter of the English alphabet, called o and written in the Latin script.
  • noun. The name of the Latin script letter O/o.
  • noun. A zero (used in reading out numbers).
  • interjection. The English vocative particle, used before a pronoun or the name of a person or persons to mark direct address.
  • interjection. Alternative form of oh.
  • Word Usage
    "Without referring to geometry we can see at a glance by Fig. 172, where we have simply turned the square _o o o o_ on its centre so that its angles touch the sides of the outer square, that it is exactly half of square _ABEF_, since each quarter of it, such as"
    cross-reference
    Equivalent
    Form
    kayo  okay  
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Au  Beau  Bio  Bo  Bordeaux  
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    Aloha  Pau  Uri  a  ana  
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    cipher  one  zero