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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 most children can form what we call regular habits about it, by trying to do it at the same times each day. If you are quite strong, five times a day is often enough: when you first get up, at recess, at noon, at four o'clock, and at bedtime. Many children do it much oftener than this; but as they grow older and the muscles grow stronger, they slowly outgrow this trouble, if they try to form the ...
— The Child's Day • Woods Hutchinson

... against the window for nearly half an hour, Titmouse, heavily sighing, returned to bed—but there he tossed about in wretched restlessness till nearly four o'clock in the morning. If he now and then sank into forgetfulness for a while, it was only to be harassed by the dreadful image of Mrs. Squallop, shouting at him, tearing his hair, cuffing him, flinging a pot of porter in his face, opening his boxes, tossing his clothes about, ...
— Ten Thousand a-Year. Volume 1. • Samuel Warren

... up, Once dreaded by our foes, And mingle with your cup The tears that England owes; Her timbers yet are sound, And she may float again, Full charg'd with England's thunder, And plough the distant main; But Kempenfelt is gone, His victories are o'er; And he and his eight hundred Must plough ...
— Flag and Fleet - How the British Navy Won the Freedom of the Seas • William Wood

... thou hast set forth deceit. These things hast thou done, and I held my tongue, and thou thoughtest, wickedly, that I am even such a one as thyself. But I will reprove thee, and set before thee the things which thou hast done. O consider this, ye that forget God: lest I pluck you away, and there ...
— All Saints' Day and Other Sermons • Charles Kingsley

... employed, show as much exterior piety and respect as we can do in our churches. I do not believe, however, that it is possible to make a greater jest of religion than they do, when their prayers are ended. The women, who only attend the morning matins, and those which they go about at ten o'clock at night, place themselves at the gate of their tents, and keep themselves with ...
— Perils and Captivity • Charlotte-Adelaide [nee Picard] Dard


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