O – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
o
interj.
oh! (expression of understanding); oh! (cry of surprise)
n.
15th letter of the alphabet; symbol for zero
O (oxygen)
n.
nonmetallic diatomic element that is normally colorless odorless and tasteless and which is the most abundant element and is essential to life
o' (of)
prep.
belonging to
O
-o may refer to:
- the -o affix found in English and many other languages.
- Macron
Ò
Ó
(
o-
acute) is a letter in the
Faroese,
Hungarian,
Icelandic,
Kashubian,
Polish,
Czech,
Slovak, and
Sorbian languages. This letter also appears in the
Catalan,
Irish,
Occitan,
Portuguese,
Spanish,
Italian and
Galician languages as a variant of letter “o”. It is sometimes also used in English for
loanwords.
Õ
- Not to be confused with O, O with double acute.
Ö
Ö, or
ö, is a character used in several extended
Latin alphabets, or the letter
O with
umlaut to denote the front vowels or . In languages without umlaut, the character is also used as an "O with
diaeresis" to denote a syllable break, wherein its pronunciation remains an unmodified .
Ø
Big O notation
In
mathematics,
big O notation describes the
limiting behavior of a
function when the argument tends towards a particular value or infinity, usually in terms of simpler functions. It is a member of a larger family of notations that is called
Landau notation,
Bachmann–Landau notation (after
Edmund Landau and
Paul Bachmann), or
asymptotic notation. In
computer science, big O notation is used to
classify algorithms by how they respond (
e.g., in their processing time or working space requirements) to changes in input size. In
analytic number theory, it is used to estimate the "error committed" while replacing the asymptotic size, or asymptotic mean size, of an
arithmetical function, by the value, or mean value, it takes at a large finite argument. A famous example is the problem of estimating the remainder term in the
prime number theorem.
Blood type
A
blood type (also called a
blood group) is a classification of
blood based on the presence or absence of
inherited antigenic substances on the surface of
red blood cells (RBCs). These antigens may be
proteins,
carbohydrates,
glycoproteins, or
glycolipids, depending on the blood group system. Some of these antigens are also present on the surface of other types of cells of various
tissues. Several of these red blood cell surface antigens can stem from one
allele (or an alternative version of a gene) and collectively form a blood group system. Blood types are inherited and represent contributions from both parents. A total of 35
human blood group systems are now recognized by the
International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT). The two most important ones are
ABO and the
RhD antigen; they determine someone's blood type (A, B, AB and O, with +, - or Null denoting RhD status).
Breve
A
breve (, less often ; ; from the
Latin brevis “short, brief”) is the
diacritic mark
˘, shaped like the bottom half of a circle. As used in
Ancient Greek, it is also called
vrachy or
brachy. It resembles the
caron (the wedge or
háček in
Czech) but is rounded; the caron has a sharp tip.
Caron
A
caron or
háček (; from
Czech háček ) or
mäkčeň (; from
Slovak mäkčeň or ), also known as a
wedge,
inverted circumflex,
inverted hat, is a
diacritic ( ˇ ) placed over certain letters to indicate present or historical
palatalization,
iotation, or
postalveolar pronunciation in the orthography of some
Baltic,
Slavic,
Finnic,
Samic,
Berber and other languages. The caron also indicates the third
tone (falling and then rising) in the
Pinyin romanization of
Mandarin Chinese.
Circumflex
Diethyl ether
Diethyl ether, also known as
ethoxyethane,
ethyl ether,
sulfuric ether, or simply
ether, is an
organic compound in the
ether class with the formula . It is a colorless, highly
volatile flammable liquid. It is commonly used as a
solvent and was once used as a
general anesthetic. It has narcotic properties and has been known to cause temporary dependence, the only symptom of which is the will to consume more, sometimes referred to as
etheromania.
Double acute accent
The
double acute accent ( ˝ ) is a
diacritic mark of the Latin script. It is used primarily in
written Hungarian, and consequently is sometimes referred to by typographers as
Hungarumlaut. The signs formed with diacritic marks are letters in their own right in the Hungarian alphabet (for instance, they are separate letters for the purpose of
collation).
Emoticon
An
emoticon ( or ), etymologically a
portmanteau of
emotion and
icon, is a
metacommunicative pictorial representation of a
facial expression that, in the absence of
body language and
prosody, serves to draw a receiver's
attention to the tenor or temper of a sender's nominal non-verbal communication, changing and improving its interpretation. It expresses — usually by means of
punctuation marks (though it can include numbers and letters) — a person's feelings or mood, though as emoticons have become more popular, some devices have provided stylized pictures that do not use punctuation.
Empty set
List of emoticons
This is a list of notable and commonly used
emoticons or textual portrayals of a writer's moods or facial expressions in the form of
icons. The
Western use of emoticons is quite different from
Eastern usage, and
Internet forums, such as
2channel, typically show expressions in their own ways. In recent times, graphic representations, both static and animated, have taken the place of traditional emoticons in the form of icons. These are commonly known as
emoji although the term
kaomoji is more correct.
Macron
A
macron is a
diacritical mark, a straight bar placed above a letter, usually a
vowel. Its name derives from the
Greek (
makrón), meaning "long", and was originally used to mark long or heavy
syllables in Greco-Roman metrics. It now more often marks a
long vowel. In the
International Phonetic Alphabet, the macron is used to indicate a mid-
tone; the sign for a long vowel is instead a modified triangular colon .
O (disambiguation)
O is the fifteenth letter of the modern Latin alphabet.
Object file
An
object file is a file containing
object code, meaning relocatable format
machine code that is usually not directly executable. There are various formats for object files, and the same object code can be packaged in different object files. An
object file also works like an Application Extension (.dll).
Ogonek
Oneworld
Oneworld (marketed as
oneworld;
CRS:
*O) is an
airline alliance founded on 1 February 1999. The alliance's stated objective is to be the first-choice airline alliance for the world's frequent international travelers. Its central alliance office is currently based in
New York,
New York, in the
United States. Its member airlines include
Air Berlin,
American Airlines,
British Airways,
Cathay Pacific,
Finnair,
Iberia,
Japan Airlines,
LAN Airlines,
Malaysia Airlines,
Qantas,
Qatar Airways,
Royal Jordanian,
S7 Airlines,
SriLankan Airlines and
TAM Airlines, plus some 30 affiliated airlines. As of 31 March 2014, Oneworld is the third largest global alliance in terms of passengers with 512.8 million passengers, behind
Star Alliance (637.6 M) and
SkyTeam (588 M). Its slogan is "An alliance of the world's leading airlines working as one."
Oneworld (disambiguation)
Oneworld is an international airline alliance.
Shift Out and Shift In characters
Shift Out (SO) and
Shift In (SI) are
ASCII control characters 14 and 15, respectively (0x0E and 0x0F.) These are sometimes also called "Control-N" and "Control-O".
Ø (Disambiguation)
Ø (disambiguation)
Ø (and
ø) is a Scandinavian vowel letter.
O
Noun
1. the blood group whose red cells carry neither the A nor B antigens; "people with type O blood are universal donors"
(synonym) type O, group O
(hypernym) blood group, blood type
2. a nonmetallic bivalent element that is normally a colorless odorless tasteless nonflammable diatomic gas; constitutes 21 percent of the atmosphere by volume; the most abundant element in the earth's crust
(synonym) oxygen, atomic number 8
(hypernym) chemical element, element
(hyponym) liquid oxygen, LOX
(substance-holonym) water, H2O
3. the 15th letter of the Roman alphabet
(hypernym) letter, letter of the alphabet, alphabetic character
(member-holonym) Roman alphabet, Latin alphabet
O (Osten)
E, east, direction from which the sun rises, direction opposite west on a compass
O (das)
n.
o, 15th letter of the alphabet; symbol for zero
Ö (das)
n.
o umlaut, German vocal
o. (oben)
above, up
o. (oder)
or, word used to connect two alternatives; and not
o. (ohne)
without, lacking
o
n.
o, 15th letter of the alphabet; symbol for zero; oxygen, nonmetallic diatomic element that is normally colorless odorless and tasteless