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O   /oʊ/   Listen
interjection
O  interj.  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. "For ever, O Lord, thy word is settled in heaven." "O how love I thy law! it is my meditation all the day." Note: O is frequently followed by an ellipsis and that, an in expressing a wish: "O (I wish) that Ishmael might live before thee!"; or in expressions of surprise, indignation, or regret: "O (it is sad) that such eyes should e'er meet other object!" Note: A distinction between the use of O and oh is insisted upon by some, namely, that O should be used only in direct address to a person or personified object, and should never be followed by the exclamation point, while Oh (or oh) should be used in exclamations where no direct appeal or address to an object is made, and may be followed by the exclamation point or not, according to the nature or construction of the sentence. Some insist that oh should be used only as an interjection expressing strong feeling. The form O, however, is, it seems, the one most commonly employed for both uses by modern writers and correctors for the press. "O, I am slain!" "O what a fair and ministering angel!" "O sweet angel!" "O for a kindling touch from that pure flame!" "But she is in her grave, and oh The difference to me!" "Oh for a lodge in some vast wilderness!" "We should distinguish between the sign of the vocative and the emotional interjection, writing O for the former, and oh for the latter."
O dear, and O dear me!, exclamations expressive of various emotions, but usually promoted by surprise, consternation, grief, pain, etc.



noun
O  n.  
1.
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 Phoenician, which possibly derived it ultimately from the Egyptian. Etymologically, the letter o is most closely related to a, e, and u; as in E. broke, AS. brecan to break; E. bore, AS. beran to bear; E. toft, tuft; tone, tune; number, F. nombre. The letter o has several vowel sounds, the principal of which are its long sound, as in bone, its short sound, as in nod, and the sounds heard in the words orb, son, do (feod), and wolf (book). In connection with the other vowels it forms several digraphs and diphthongs.
2.
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. O was also anciently used to represent 11: with a dash over it, 11,000.



O  n.  (pl. o's or oes)  
1.
The letter O, or its sound. "Mouthing out his hollow oes and aes."
2.
Something shaped like the letter O; a circle or oval. "This wooden O (Globe Theater)".
3.
A cipher; zero. (R.) "Thou art an O without a figure."



adjective
O  adj.  One. (Obs.) "Alle thre but o God."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"O" Quotes from Famous Books



... but to march through Taylor's Gap, three miles to the west, and get in the rear of the Federals and upon their line of retreat and communication with Knoxville. Accordingly, we broke camp and marched about ten o'clock that night. Vaughan, who had returned, moved in advance. Palmer's infantry, the dismounted men, and the artillery, were ...
— History of Morgan's Cavalry • Basil W. Duke

... Mr. Burgess call her three times. She told me that she suddenly jumped up and put her dressing-gown on. By the time she had put on her dressing-gown and lit the gas she remembered Mr. Burgess had left the house. She said it was about 3 o'clock a.m. when ...
— Telepathy - Genuine and Fraudulent • W. W. Baggally

... relies. He differs from her especially as to the hour at which the different occurrences of this day took place. For instance, he says (p. 268, note 2) that Mandat left the Tuileries a little after five, while Madame de Campan says it was four o'clock when the queen told her he had been murdered. Both, however, agree that it was soon after eight o'clock when the king left ...
— The Life of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France • Charles Duke Yonge

... my dear, I will confess— (Though really you too hard are) So dry these tears and smooth each tress— Let Betty search the larder; Then o'er a chop and genial glass, Though I so late have tarried, I will recount what came to pass I' the ...
— Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 1, August 14, 1841 • Various

... later, we approached a charming spot, within three hours of Pretoria, near a clear stream, surrounded with lovely trees and flowers; we took the Communion together, strengthening each other for the future. Monday, at nine o'clock, we reached Pretoria. We were looked at with curiosity; they read our names on the sides of my waggon, they seemed surprised, and held discussions among themselves; the Field Cornet himself saw us pass, they told me sometime later. But we passed ...
— Native Races and the War • Josephine Elizabeth Butler


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