Contionary:o: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m →Noun: replaced: {{loxw-n| → {{head|loxw|noun|g= |
m →Etymology: replaced: {{loxw-knra → From {{der|loxw|knra |
||
| Line 53: | Line 53: | ||
==Central Isles Creole== | ==Central Isles Creole== | ||
===Etymology=== | ===Etymology=== | ||
{{loxw | From {{der|loxw|knra|ua}} | ||
===Pronunciation=== | ===Pronunciation=== | ||
Latest revision as of 19:55, 2 February 2026
Avendonian
Pronunciation
Etymology
From Latin aut.
Conjunction
o
- or
Brooding
Alternative forms
| Extended ASCII Form: | o |
| Abjad ASCII Form: | o |
Pronunciation
(Brooding) IPA: /o/
Conjunction
o
- 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
- marks the end of a vocative (who is being spoken to)
- marks the start of an imperative (command, wish, instruction)
- should
Central Isles Creole
Etymology
Pronunciation
Noun
o a
- fish
- (please add the primary text of this usage example)
- (please add an English translation of this usage example)
Categories:
- Contionary
- Avendonian conjunctions
- Avendonian words
- Brooding words
- Brooding conjunctions
- Toki Pona particles
- Toki Pona words
- Central Isles Creole terms derived from Knrawi
- Central Isles Creole lemmas
- Central Isles Creole nouns
- Central Isles Creole animate nouns
- Requests for translations of Central Isles Creole usage examples