Contionary:o: Difference between revisions

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==Central Isles Creole==
==Central Isles Creole==
===Etymology===
===Etymology===
{{loxw-knra|ua}}
From {{der|loxw|knra|ua}}


===Pronunciation===
===Pronunciation===
Line 63: Line 63:
# fish
# fish
#: {{ux|loxw||}}
#: {{ux|loxw||}}
==Paranukian==
===Pronunciation===
* {{ipa+|eore|[o]}}
===Article===
{{head|eore|article form|plural|ho|definite|to}}
# {{inflection of|eore|e||accusative}}
===See also===
{{eore-art}}

Latest revision as of 18:27, 23 June 2026

Avendonian

Pronunciation

  • (Central Avendonian) IPA(key): [o]

Etymology

From Latin aut.

Conjunction

o

  1. or

Brooding

Alternative forms

Extended ASCII Form: o
Abjad ASCII Form: o

Pronunciation

(Brooding) IPA: /o/

Conjunction

o

  1. or

Usage Notes

“Phrasal or” - used to join two parts of a single phrase. See otlaibroo for “clausal or.”



Toki Pona

Etymology

Georgian: -ო (-o); (vocative suffix). Created by Sonja Lang pre-pu.

Pronunciation

(Toki Pona) IPA: /o/

Particle

o

  1. marks the end of a vocative (who is being spoken to)
  2. marks the start of an imperative (command, wish, instruction)
  3. should

Central Isles Creole

Etymology

From Knrawi ua

Pronunciation

Noun

o a

  1. fish
    (please add the primary text of this usage example)
    (please add an English translation of this usage example)

Paranukian

Pronunciation

Article

o (plural ho, definite to)

  1. accusative of e

See also

Paranukian articles
indef def
sing pl sing pl
nom e he te se
acc o ho to ho/so
gen a ha ta sa
dat/inst u hu tu so/su