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lo

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Appendix:Variations of "lo"
Languages (61)
Translingual • English
Achang • Aragonese • Asturian • Basque • Catalan • Chickasaw • Chinese • Cornish • Danish • Dutch • Esperanto • Franco-Provençal • Galician • Ido • Indonesian • Interlingua • Italian • Japanese • Laboya • Ladino • Lashi • Lolopo • Louisiana Creole • Luxembourgish • Malagasy • Mandarin • Manikion • Middle Dutch • Mizo • Neapolitan • Norwegian Bokmål • Norwegian Nynorsk • Occitan • Old French • Old Galician-Portuguese • Old Occitan • Old Spanish • Papiamentu • Phalura • Polish • Portuguese • Romansch • Silesian • Southern Ndebele • Spanish • Sranan Tongo • Swahili • Swedish • Tok Pisin • Vietnamese • Welsh • West Makian • Wutunhua • Xhosa • Yoruba • Zaniza Zapotec • Zhuang • Zou • Zulu
Page categories

Translingual

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Etymology

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Abbreviation ofEnglishLao, fromLaoລາວ(lāo).

Symbol

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lo

  1. (international standards)ISO 639-1language code forLao.

See also

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English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Inherited fromMiddle Englishlo,loo, fromOld English(exclamation of surprise, grief, or joy). Conflated in Middle English withlo! (interjection), a corruption oflok!,loke!(look!) (as inlo we!(look we!)). Cognate withScotslo,lu(lo). See alsolook.

Interjection

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lo

  1. (archaic except in the phraselo and behold)look,see,behold(in an imperative sense).
Synonyms
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Derived terms
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Related terms
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Translations
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look, see, behold

Etymology 2

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Variant oflow.

Adjective

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lo (notcomparable)

  1. Informal spelling oflow.
Derived terms
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Related terms
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Etymology 3

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Interjection

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lo

  1. Clipping ofhello.
Alternative forms
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Etymology 4

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Clipping oflocation.

Noun

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lo (plurallos)

  1. (African-American Vernacular)Clipping oflocation.
    Ayo, send me yourlo.

Etymology 5

[edit]

Particle

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lo

  1. Alternative form oflol.

See also

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Etymology 6

[edit]

Borrowed fromHokkien /(--lo͘).Doublet oflor.

Alternative forms

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Pronunciation

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Particle

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lo

  1. (Singlish, Manglish, rare or in set phrases)Sentence-final particle denotingfinality orcompletion.
    Synonyms:(Singlish)liao,already

See also

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Anagrams

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Achang

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Pronunciation

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  • (Myanmar)/lɔ˧/
  • (Lianghe)[lo³¹]
  • (Longchuan)[lo³¹]

Noun

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lo

  1. child

Derived terms

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Further reading

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  • Inglis, Douglas; Sampu, Nasaw; Jaseng, Wilai; Jana, Thocha (2005),A preliminary Ngochang–Kachin–English Lexicon[4], Payap University, page72

Aragonese

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Pronoun

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lo

  1. him(direct object)

Asturian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Inherited fromVulgar Latin*lo, *illu, fromLatinillud, neuter ofille.

Article

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lo sg (masculineel,femininela,masculine plurallos,feminine pluralles)

  1. (definite)the

Pronoun

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lo

  1. it (third-person singular neuter direct pronoun)

Basque

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BasqueWikipedia has an article on:
Wikipediaeu

Etymology

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(Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

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Noun

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lo inan

  1. sleep

Declension

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Declension oflo(inan V-stem)
indefinitesingularpluralproximal plural
absolutiveloloaloaklook
ergativelokloakloeklook
dativeloriloariloeilooi
genitivelorenloarenloenloon
comitativelorekinloarekinloekinlookin
causativelorengatikloarengatikloengatikloongatik
benefactivelorentzatloarentzatloentzatloontzat
instrumentallozloazloezlootaz
innesivelotanloanloetanlootan
locativelotakolokoloetakolootako
allativelotaraloraloetaralootara
terminativelotarainolorainoloetarainolootaraino
directivelotarantzlorantzloetarantzlootarantz
destinativelotarakolorakoloetarakolootarako
ablativelotatiklotikloetatiklootatik
partitivelorik
prolativelotzat

Derived terms

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Further reading

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  • lo”, inEuskaltzaindiaren Hiztegia [Dictionary of the Basque Academy] (in Basque),Euskaltzaindia [Royal Academy of the Basque Language]
  • lo”, inOrotariko Euskal Hiztegia [General Basque Dictionary],Euskaltzaindia,1987–2005

Catalan

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Inherited fromVulgar Latin*illu, fromLatinillum, accusative ofille.

Pronoun

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lo (enclitic,contracted'l,procliticel,contracted procliticl')

  1. him (direct object)
Usage notes
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  • -lo is the full (plena) form of the pronoun. It is normally used after verbs ending with aconsonant or ⟨u⟩.
    Has d'ajudar-lo.You have to help him.
Declension
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Catalan personal pronouns and clitics
strong/subjectweak (direct object)weak (indirect object)possessive
procliticencliticprocliticenclitic
singular1st
person
standardjo,mi3em,m’-me,’mem,m’-me,’mmeu
majestic1nósens-nos,’nsens-nos,’nsnostre
2nd
person
standardtuet,t’-te,’tet,t’-te,’tteu
formal1vósus-vos,-usus-vos,-usvostre
very formal2vostèel,l’-lo,’lli-liseu
3rd
person
mellel,l’-lo,’lli-liseu
fellala,l’4-lali-liseu
nho-holi-liseu
plural
1st personnosaltresens-nos,’nsens-nos,’nsnostre
2nd
person
standardvosaltresus-vos,-usus-vos,-usvostre
formal2vostèsels-los,’lsels-los,’lsseu
3rd
person
mellsels-los,’lsels-los,’lsseu
fellesles-lesels-los,’lsseu
3rd person reflexivesies,s’-se,’ses,s’-se,’sseu
adverbialablative/genitiveen,n’-ne,’n
locativehi-hi

1 Behaves grammatically as plural.  2 Behaves grammatically as third person.
3 Only as object of a preposition.  4 Not before unstressed (h)i-, (h)u-.

Etymology 2

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Inherited fromLatinillum, fromille.

Article

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lo m (femininela,masculine plurallos,feminine pluralles)

  1. (archaic or dialectal)the(definite article)
    Synonym:(standard)el
    Tirantlo Blanc.Tirantthe White.

Etymology 3

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Spanishlo.

Article

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lo

  1. neuter definite article used only beforenominalizedadjectives:the, that which is. The neutral “lo” is not considered standard in Catalan, andel or other alternatives are used instead.
    Faremlo (el que sigui/allò) necessariWe will do what is necessary.
    Lo (El) més importantThe most important thing.

Further reading

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Chickasaw

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Pronoun

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lo

  1. I

Chinese

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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lo

  1. (neologism, mostly in compounds)Lolita fashion
    lo  ― lo niáng  ―  a girl who regularly dresses inlolita fashion

Derived terms

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Cornish

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Lo vras

Etymology

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Inherited fromProto-Brythonic*lluɨɣ, fromProto-Celtic*leigā. Cognate withBretonloa (Vannes dialectloé,lui) andWelshllwy.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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lo f (pluralloyow)

  1. spoon

Derived terms

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Danish

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Verb

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lo

  1. past ofle

Dutch

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Etymology

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Borrowed fromSranan Tongolo,Saramaccanlɔ́,Aukan, all probably fromEwehlɔ̃(revenge; group of (maternal) relatives responsible for exacting revenge, clan).[1][2]

Pronunciation

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Noun

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lo f (plurallo's,nodiminutive)

  1. (chiefly Suriname)matrilinealclan within aMaroon tribe
    • 2023 August 28, Samuel Wens, “Saramaccaners hebben naast Aboikoni nu ook Banai als granman [In addition to Aboikoni, Saramaccans now also have Banai as paramount chief]”, inDe Ware Tijd[5], retrieved6 January 2024:
      Stefanus Poeketi, kapitein van Dawme en voorzitter van de ‘Twaalfoe Lo’, stelde dat de functie van granman niet uitsluitend door éénlo zal worden uitgeoefend. Hij kondigde aan dat notarieel vastgelegd zal worden dat het ‘granmanschap’ gaat rouleren onder de twaalflo’s van de Saramaccaanse stam.
      Stefanus Poeketi, village chief of Dawme and chairman of the 'Twaalfoe Lo', stated that the position of paramount chief will not be held exclusively by oneclan. He announced that it will be notarially certified that the 'paramount chieftaincy' will rotate among the twelveclans of the Saramaccan tribe.

References

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  1. ^Norval Smith (2009), “A preliminary list of probable Gbe lexical items in the Surinam Creoles”, inP. Muysken, N. Smith, editors,Surviving the Middle Passage: The West Africa-Surinam Sprachbund, Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton,→ISBN, page469.
  2. ^Klaus Hamberger (2009), “Matrilinéarité et culte des aïeules chez les Éwé [Matrilinearity and Ancestress Cults among the Ewe]”, inJournal des africanistes[1], volume79, number 1, Paris:Société des africanistes,→ISSN Invalid ISSN, retrieved8 January 2024, pages241-279.

Esperanto

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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lo (accusative singularlo-on,plurallo-oj,accusative plurallo-ojn)

  1. The name of theLatin-script letterL/l.

See also

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Franco-Provençal

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Etymology 1

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Inherited fromLatinillum.

Alternative forms

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Determiner

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lo m (prevocalicl',feminine singularla,masculine plurallos,feminine pluralles)

  1. the(masculine singular definite article)

Pronoun

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lo m (prevocalicl')(ORB, broad)

  1. him,it(third-person singular masculine accusative)
See also
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Franco-Provençal personal pronouns
nominativeaccusativedativetonic1possessive2
singular1st personjomin
2nd persontetin
3rd personmasculineillo /leluisin
feminineellalyé
neuteroy
reflexive
plural1st personnosnoutro
2nd personvosvoutro
3rd personmasculineilslos /leslorlor
feminineelsleslor /lyés
reflexive

1 Disjunctive or object of a preposition.  2 Generally preceded by a definite article.

References

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  • le [1] in DicoFranPro:Dictionnaire Français/Francoprovençal – ondicofranpro.llm.umontreal.ca
  • lo in Lo trèsor Arpitan – onarpitan.eu

Etymology 2

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    Noun

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    lo(Old Dauphinois)

    1. alternative form oflop(wolf)

    References

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    Etymology 3

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      Noun

      [edit]

      lo(Old Dauphinois)

      1. alternative form oflèc(lake)

      References

      [edit]

      Galician

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      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Seeo. ComparePortugueselo.

      Article

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      lo sg (feminine singularla,masculine plurallos,feminine plurallas)

      1. alternative form ofo(the,masculine singular)
        Para seres forte debes come-lo caldo.
        You must eatthe broth for growing strong.
      Usage notes
      [edit]

      Thel- forms of article are compulsorily used after the prepositionpor and adverbu. It is optional when the preceding word ends in-r or-s, after unstressed pronounsnos,vos andlles (when they are enclitc) ofambos,entrambos,todos,tras and copulative conjunction (emais and tonic pronounsvós andnós followed by a numerical precision).

      Related terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Pronoun

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      lo m (accusative)

      1. alternative form ofo(him)
      Usage notes
      [edit]

      Thel- forms of accusative third-person pronouns are used when the preceding word ends in-r or-s, and is suffixed to the preceding word.

      Related terms
      [edit]

      Ido

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      Etymology

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      Back-formation fromco(this),to(that), based onla(the),ol(it).[1]

      Pronunciation

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      Pronoun

      [edit]

      lo

      1. referring to a previous sentence or phrase, i.e. a fact rather than an object;it,the
        Il esas mortinta de tri monati, e vu ne savaslo!
        He's been dead for three months, and you didn't knowit(that he's been dead for three months)!

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^Progreso, VI, 238

      Indonesian

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      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Borrowed fromBetawi Kotalo(you), fromHokkien().Doublet oflu.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      lo

      1. (chiefly Jakarta, colloquial)Second-person singular pronoun:you,your,yours
        Oke, kalaulo baper, yuk cabut.[1]OK, ifyou are sensitive, let's go!
      Synonyms
      [edit]

      Indonesian informal second-person pronouns:

      • anta(informal, mainly used by Muslim community)
      • antum(informal, mainly used by Muslim community)
      • coen(slang, East Java)
      • ente(informal, mainly used by Betawi ethnic group)
      • kamu(intimate)
      • ko,kowe(informal, Java)
      • kon,koen(colloquial, East Java)
      • lu,lo,loe,elu(informal, mainly used by Betawi ethnic group)
      • mika,mike(informal, Eastern Sumatra)

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^2018, Yuni Astuti,Saipeh Baper, CV Jejak (Jejak Publisher) (→ISBN), page 53:

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Interjection

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      lo

      1. alternative spelling ofloh

      Particle

      [edit]

      lo

      1. alternative spelling ofloh

      Further reading

      [edit]

      Interlingua

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      lo

      1. it,that (direct object)
        Tu lo audi? – Do you hear it?

      Related terms

      [edit]

      Italian

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      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Inherited fromVulgar Latin*illu, fromLatinillum,illud, by droppingil- and-m.[2]

      Article

      [edit]

      lo sg (pluralgli)

      1. the form ofil that is used before the so-called impure consonants, that is, s+consonant (impure s), gn, pn, ps, x, y, or z, and before i+vocal; before a vowel it becomesl';the
        l’ossothe bone
        lo statothe state
        lo ziothe uncle
        lo ionethe ion
      Inflection
      [edit]
      Italian definite articles
      singularplural
      masculineil
      lo (l')
      i
      gli
      femininela (l')le

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Inherited fromLatinillum.

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      lo sg (pluralli,femalela)

      1. (accusative)him
        Lo conosci?Do you knowhim?
      2. (accusative)it,this orthat thing
        Synonym:ciò
        Quando telo diedi.When I gaveit to you.
      See also
      [edit]
      Italian personal pronouns
      NumberPersonGenderNominativeReflexiveAccusativeDativeCombinedDisjunctiveLocativePartitive
      Singularfirstiomi,m',-mimeme
      secondtuti,t',-titete
      thirdmluisi2,s',-silo,l',-logli,-gliglie,se2lui,ci,c',
      vi,v'(formal)
      ne,n'
      flei,Lei1la,La1,l',L'1,-la,-La1le3,Le1,-le3,-Le1lei,Lei1,
      Pluralfirstnoici,c',-cicenoi
      secondvoi,Voi4vi,Vi4,v',V'4,-vi,-Vi4vevoi,Voi4
      thirdmloro,Loro1si,s',-sili,Li1,-li,-Li1gli,-gli,loro(formal),
      Loro1
      glie,seloro,Loro1,ci,c',
      vi,v'(formal)
      ne,n'
      fle,Le1,-le,-Le1
      1Third person pronominal forms used as formal terms of address to refer to second person subjects (with the first letter frequently capitalised as a sign of respect, and to distinguish them from third person subjects). Unlike the singular forms, the plural forms are mostly antiquated terms of formal address in the modern language, and second person plural pronouns are almost always used instead.
      2Also used as indefinite pronoun meaning “one”, and to form the passive.
      3Often replaced bygli,-gli in informal language.
      4Formal (capitalisation optional); in many regions, can refer to just one person (compare with Frenchvous).

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^lo inLuciano Canepari,Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)
      2. ^Patota, Giuseppe (2002),Lineamenti di grammatica storica dell'italiano (in Italian), Bologna: il Mulino,→ISBN, page123

      Japanese

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      Romanization

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      lo

      1. Rōmaji transcription ofろ゚
      2. Rōmaji transcription ofロ゚

      Laboya

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      lo

      1. togo
        Synonyms:kako,attu

      References

      [edit]
      • Rina, A. Dj.; Kabba, John Lado B. (2011), “lo”, inKamus Bahasa Lamboya, Kabupaten Sumba Bakat [Dictionary of Lamboya Language, West Sumba Regency], Waikabubak: Dinas Kebudayaan dan Pariwisata, Kabupaten Sumba Bakat, page60

      Ladino

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOld Spanishlo(the; him; it). As a masculine pronoun, fromLatinillum, the accusative masculine singular ofille(that, that one). As an article or impersonal neuter pronoun, fromLatinillud, the neuter singular ofille. ComparePortugueseo.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      lo (Hebrew spellingלו)[1]

      1. accusative ofel
        • 1910, Reuben Eliyahu Israel,Traducsion libera de las poezias ebraicas de Roş Aşana i Kipur[6], Craiova: Institutul Grafic, I. Samitca şi D. Baraş, Socieatate in Comandita,→OCLC,page10:
          Delantre de ti io mi orgolio abato
          I mi corasonlo razgo con kevranto¹)
          I suppress my pride before you, and my heart tearsit with despair.

      Article

      [edit]

      lo

      1. neuter definite article used only beforenominalizedadjectives:the; that(which is)
        • 2008, Matilda Gini Barnatán, Viviana Rajel Barnatán, Darío Meta Barnatán,La ija i la madre komo la unya i la karne[7], Ibersaf Editores,→ISBN,page69:
          Agora soltanto
          So reflekto de Tu Brilyo
          Yo no me demando
          Sospiro
          Mirando enlo Alto
          So felis
          Dunke bivo…
          Now letting go, I am [an] image of your radiance, I wonder not; I sigh, looking above, I am happy, therefore I live…

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^lo”, inTrezoro de la Lengua Djudeoespanyola [Treasure of the Judeo-Spanish Language] (in Ladino, Hebrew, and English), Instituto Maale Adumim

      Lashi

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]
      • (Waingmaw)IPA(key): [lɔ˧˧]
      • Hyphenation:lo

      Verb

      [edit]

      lo

      1. (auxiliary)Used to mark a change of state towards an achieved action.
        • 2005, “Apoem ayang꞉ 1:3 [Genesis 1:3]”, inJhoem꞉ mougsougˮ [The Book of the Bible]‎[8], page 2:
          Mangsoo gi «Booˮ bang buiˮ weʼ» ga꞉ langˮ booˮ bang bueˮlo.
          God [be like] «Light, happen!», so light happened.

      References

      [edit]
      • Mark Wannemacher (2011),A phonological overview of the Lacid language[9], Chiang Mai: Payap University., page29
      • Hkaw Luk (2017),A grammatical sketch of Lacid[10], Chiang Mai: Payap University (master thesis), page73

      Lolopo

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited fromProto-Loloish*ʔ-l(y)a¹ (Bradley), fromProto-Sino-Tibetan. Cognate withNuosu(hxa nie),Burmeseလျှာ(hlya),S'gaw Karenပျ့ၤ(plaȳ),Tedim Chinlei²,Drungpvlai,Chepangले(le).

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo 

      1. (Yao'an)tongue

      Louisiana Creole

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Derived fromFrenchl'(the) +Frencheau(water), with thedefinite articlere-analyzed as part of the noun.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo

      1. alternative form ofdolo(water; body of water; tear)

      References

      [edit]
      • Albert Valdman,Dictionary of Louisiana Creole (1998),→ISBN

      Luxembourgish

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Adverb

      [edit]

      lo

      1. alternative form ofelo

      Malagasy

      [edit]

      Adjective

      [edit]

      lo

      1. rotten,spoiled

      Mandarin

      [edit]

      Romanization

      [edit]

      lo (lo5 /lo0,Zhuyin˙ㄌㄛ)

      1. Hanyu Pinyin reading of

      Romanization

      [edit]

      lo

      1. nonstandard spelling of

      Manikion

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo

      1. ground

      References

      [edit]
      • A Grammar Sketch of Sougb, inLanguages of the Eastern Bird's Head (2002)

      Middle Dutch

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOld Dutch*lō.

      Noun

      [edit]

       f orn

      1. clearing in aforest

      Inflection

      [edit]
      Strong feminine noun (irregular)
      singularplural
      nominative
      accusative
      genitive
      dativelôon
      Strong neuter noun (irregular)
      singularplural
      nominative
      accusative
      genitivelôos
      dativelôon


      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Descendants

      [edit]
      • Dutch:lo(obsolete outside toponyms)

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • loo”, inVroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek,2000
      • Verwijs, E.;Verdam, J. (1885–1929), “loo”, inMiddelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff,→ISBN, page loo

      Mizo

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromProto-Kuki-Chin*law.

      Particle

      [edit]

      lo

      1. Negative particle; placed after a verb to negate it

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Neapolitan

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      lo

      1. alternative form of'o

      Norwegian Bokmål

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo n (definite singularloet,uncountable)

      1. lint

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      lo

      1. past ofle

      Norwegian Nynorsk

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Compare withIcelandic. May have something to do withOld Norselagðr.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo f (definite singularloa,indefinite pluralloer,definite pluralloene)

      1. woollenhairs that shed offknitted orwovenfabrics
      Derived terms
      [edit]
      See also
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]
      Norwegian NynorskWikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipediann

      Derived fromOld Norse,lóa.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo f (definite singularloa,indefinite pluralloer,definite pluralloene)

      1. any of various birds of the familyCharadriidae, theplovers anddotterels
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOld Norselóð f orn.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo f (definite singularloa,indefinite pluralloer,definite pluralloene)

      1. (agriculture) aharvested (especiallygrain), that has beencut but notthreshed
      2. (agriculture, collective)grain,husk andstraw
      3. (agriculture) a grain harvest
      4. (agriculture, collective)hay

      Etymology 4

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOld Norse f orn(a clearing in the forest; meadow), fromProto-Germanic*lauhō f,*lauhaz m.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo f (definite singularloa,indefinite pluralloer,definite pluralloene)

      1. Used inplacenames:meadow
        Synonyms:grasslette,eng
      Related terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 5

      [edit]

      Derived fromDutch and/orMiddle Low German.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo m (definite singularloen,indefinite pluralloar,definite pluralloane)

      1. (nautical)part of avessel whose side faces thewind
      Synonyms
      [edit]
      Antonyms
      [edit]

      Adjective

      [edit]

      lo (singular and plurallo)

      1. located orsituated on thewindy side

      See also

      [edit]

      Etymology 6

      [edit]

      Derived fromMiddle Low Germanlot (genitivelodes).Doublet oflodd.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo f (definite singularloa,indefinite pluralloer,definite pluralloene)

      1. ashotgunshell
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 7

      [edit]

      Akin toIcelandiclöð.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo f (definite singularloa,indefinite pluralloer,definite pluralloene)

      1. (tools) anail header (used by ablacksmith in production of ironnails)
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 8

      [edit]

      Unknown.

      Noun

      [edit]

      lo n (definite singularloet,indefinite plurallo,definite pluralloa)

      1. naturalfertilizer
      2. dung

      Etymology 9

      [edit]

      See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.

      Verb

      [edit]

      lo

      1. pasttense ofle

      Etymology 10

      [edit]

      See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.

      Verb

      [edit]

      lo

      1. imperative ofloaandloe

      References

      [edit]

      Anagrams

      [edit]

      Occitan

      [edit]

      Alternative forms

      [edit]
      • lou(Mistralian)
      • le(Toulouse, Massat)
      • eth(Gascon)

      Etymology

      [edit]
      Etymology tree
      Vulgar Latin*lo
      Old Occitanlo
      Occitanlo

        Inherited fromOld Occitanlo, fromVulgar Latin*lo,*illu, fromLatinillum.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Article

        [edit]

        lo (femininela,masculine plurallos,feminine plurallas)

        1. the;masculine singular definite article

        Usage notes

        [edit]
        • In the Provençal dialect, the masculine and feminine plural islei.

        Old French

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        Inherited fromVulgar Latin*lo, *illu, fromLatinillum; compareOld Occitanlo.

        Article

        [edit]

        lo

        1. (9th and 10th centuries)alternative form ofle; masculine singular oblique definite article

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        lo

        1. (9th and 10th centuries)alternative form ofle; masculine singular object pronoun

        Old Galician-Portuguese

        [edit]

        Article

        [edit]

        lo

        1. alternative form ofo

        References

        [edit]

        Old Occitan

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]
        Etymology tree
        Vulgar Latin*lo
        Old Occitanlo

          Inherited fromVulgar Latin*lo,*illu fromLatinillum.

          CompareOld Frenchlo.

          Article

          [edit]

          lo (femininela)

          1. the;masculine singular definite article

          Descendants

          [edit]
          • Occitan:lo

          Old Spanish

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          As a masculine pronoun, fromLatinillum, the accusative masculine singular ofille(that, that one). As an article or impersonal neuter pronoun, fromLatinillud, the neuter singular ofille. CompareOld Galician-Portugueseo.

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. accusative ofel
            • c.1200, Almerich,Fazienda de Ultramar,f. 79r:
              Sant iuã euangeliſta fo de bethſaẏda. e p̃dico en aſia de pueslo fizo penar domiciarig[sic] el emꝑador de roma. mãdolo met̃ en una cuba dolio firuient.
              Saint John [the] Evangelist was from Bethsaida, and he preached in Asia. And then Domitian the emperor of Rome hadhim condemned,[so] he ordered he be put into a vat of boiling oil.
            • c.1250,Alfonso X,Lapidario,89r.:
              Et ſi la muelen ⁊ traen los poluos della sobre uaſos o otra manera alguna de plata, o de metal, fazlo claro ⁊ muy fremoſo. ⁊ eſſo miſmo faz alas eſpadas ⁊ alos cuchielos,[sic] ⁊ demas aguza los.
              And if they grind it and use the dust on cups or other silver or metalware, it makesit shiny and beautiful. And it does the same with swords and knives, and it also sharpens them.
          2. accusative ofello

          Article

          [edit]

          lo

          1. neuter definite article used only beforenominalizedadjectives:the; that(which is)
            • c.1200, Almerich,Fazienda de Ultramar,f. 41v:
              Aplegos el Reẏ[] diſçrael adacab Reẏ đ iħrɫm. e fueron en ſemble e dixo el Reẏ diſrɫ al Reẏ de iħrɫm uaẏamos aramot galaad q̃ es ẏ él Reẏ de ſyria elidiemos é prender loemos. e dixo ioſaphat el Reẏ de iħrɫm ẏo ire cõtigolo mẏo tuẏo eſ. el mio pueblo tuẏo es. emios cauallos tuẏos.
              The king [] of Israel approached Ahab, king of Jerusalem. And they came together, and the king of Israel said to the king of Jerusalem, “Let us go to Ramoth-Gilead, for the king of Syria is there, and let us fight and we will capture him.” And Jehoshaphat the king of Jerusalem said, “I will go with you. What is mine is yours. My people are yours, and my horses are yours.”

          References

          [edit]
          • Ralph Steele Boggset al. (1946), “lo”, inTentative Dictionary of Medieval Spanish, volume II, Chapel Hill,page308

          Papiamentu

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Derived fromPortugueselogo(soon) andSpanishluego(soon; later).

          Verb

          [edit]

          lo

          1. shall;will;indicates the future tense of a verb.

          Phalura

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Determiner

          [edit]

          lo (demonstrative,Perso-Arabic spellingلوۡ)

          1. thatagr: distal mascunline singular pronoun

          References

          [edit]
          • Henrik Liljegren; Naseem Haider (2011), “lo”, inPalula Vocabulary (FLI Language and Culture Series; 7)‎[11], Islamabad, Pakistan: Forum for Language Initiatives,→ISBN

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          lo (demonstrative,Perso-Arabic spellingلوۡ)

          1. it
          2. hedistal mascunline pronoun

          References

          [edit]
          • Henrik Liljegren; Naseem Haider (2011), “lo”, inPalula Vocabulary (FLI Language and Culture Series; 7)‎[12], Islamabad, Pakistan: Forum for Language Initiatives,→ISBN

          Polish

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Preposition

          [edit]

          lo

          1. (Poznań, Przemyśl)alternative form ofdla(for)

          Further reading

          [edit]
          • Waldemar Wierzba (2013), “lo”, inSłownik Poznańskie słowa i ausdrucki (in Polish), 1st edition, Mierzyn: Albus,→ISBN, page132
          • Aleksander Saloni (1899), “lo”, in “Lud wiejski w okolicy Przeworska”, in M. Arct, E. Lubowski, editors,Wisła : miesięcznik gieograficzno-etnograficzny (in Polish), volume13, Warsaw: Artur Gruszecki, page241

          Portuguese

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Seeo.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          • Hyphenation:lo

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. alternative form ofo(third-personmasculinesingularobjective pronoun)used as anenclitic andmesoclitic following a verb form ending in aconsonant (-z, -r and -s, but not -m); the consonant is elided and the preceding vowel takes an accent if necessary
            Contá-lo (contar)To tellit.
            Contámo-lo (contamos)We toldit.
            Fi-lo (fiz)I didit.
            Tem-lo (tens)You haveit.

          Coordinate terms

          [edit]
          • no(following a nasal vowel),o(following an oral vowel)

          See also

          [edit]

          SeeTemplate:Portuguese personal pronouns for further pronouns.

          Romansch

          [edit]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]
          • (Rumantsch Grischun, Sursilvan)lad

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Inherited fromLatinlātus.

          Adjective

          [edit]

          lom (feminine singularloa,masculine plurallos,feminine pluralloas)

          1. (Sutsilvan)wide,broad

          Synonyms

          [edit]
          • (Rumantsch Grischun, Sursilvan, Sutsilvan, Surmiran)lartg
          • (Puter, Vallader)larg

          Silesian

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Preposition

          [edit]

          lo

          1. by,at,on
          2. to
          3. for

          Further reading

          [edit]
          • Barbara Podgórska; Adam Podgóski (2008), “lo”, inSłownik gwar śląskich [A dictionary of Silesian dialects] (in Polish), Katowice: Wydawnictwo KOS,→ISBN, page159

          Southern Ndebele

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. this;class 1 proximal demonstrative.

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. this;class 3 proximal demonstrative.

          Spanish

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Inherited fromOld Spanishlo(the; him; it). As a masculine pronoun, fromLatinillum, the accusative masculine singular ofille(that, that one). As an article or impersonal neuter pronoun, fromLatinillud, the neuter singular ofille. ComparePortugueseo.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. accusative ofél,ello, andusted (when referring to a man);him,it,you (formal)
            lo veoI seeit
          2. impersonal neuter pronounclitic ofello;it,that
            lo esThat’sit

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]
          Spanish personal pronouns
          NominativeDisjunctiveDativeAccusativeComitative
          First-personSingularyomeconmigo
          PluralMasculine1nosotrosnos
          Femininenosotras
          Second-personSingularTuteotitecontigo
          Voseovos
          Formal2Masculine1ustedle,se3lo
          Femininela
          PluralFamiliar4Masculine1vosotrosos
          Femininevosotras
          Formal/general2Masculine1ustedesles,se3los
          Femininelas
          Third-personSingularMasculine1élle,se3lo
          Feminineellala
          Neuterello5lo
          PluralMasculine1ellosles,se3los
          Feminineellaslas
          Reflexiveseconsigo
          1. Like other masculine words, masculine pronouns can be used when the gender of the subject is unknown or when the subject is plural and of mixed gender.
          2. Treated as if it were third person for purposes of conjugation and reflexivity.
          3. Ifle orles precedeslo,la,los, orlas in a clause, it is replaced withse (e.g.se lo dije instead of*le lo dije).
          4. Used primarily in Spain.
          5. Used only in rare circumstances.

          Article

          [edit]

          lo

          1. neuter definite article used only beforenominalizedadjectives:the, that which is
            Haremoslo necesario.We will dothe necessary /what is necessary.
            Lo blanco simboliza la pureza.The [colour] white symbolizes purity.
            Lo asombroso es que...The amazing [thing] is that...
            • 2024 October 20, EFE, “Nueva caravana migrante con miles de personas sale de la frontera sur de México hacia Estados Unidos”, inCNN en Español[13]:
              Gilberto Herrero Mejía, otro migrante proveniente de Venezuela, denunció que en su país la situación es crítica y el dinero no alcanza para nada, pues en su caso, se dedicaba a manejar un autobús con un sueldo de 10 a 15 dólares,lo cual era insuficiente para poder sobrevivir.
              (pleaseadd an English translation of this quotation)

          Usage notes

          [edit]
          • Lo usually gives the adjective an abstract quality (as above). It can also refer to a thing, butel is more common in this case, e.g.el / lo blanco de los ojos(the white of the eye).Lo can never be used when the adjective refers back to a noun, e.g.el barco grande y el pequeño(the big boat and the small one).

          Further reading

          [edit]

          Sranan Tongo

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          Derived fromEnglishrow, ultimately fromProto-Germanic*rōaną(to row), fromProto-Indo-European*h₁reh₁-(to row).

          Alternative forms

          [edit]
          • ro(obsolete)

          Verb

          [edit]

          lo

          1. torow
            Synonym:lolo
            • 1783, C. L. Schumann,Neger-Englisches Wörterbuch [Negro English Dictionary]‎[14], archived fromthe original on8 February 2023:
              da somma no sabi valo
              [A sma no sabi fulo]
              That guy doesn't know how torow.

          Noun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. oar
            • 1783, C. L. Schumann,Neger-Englisches Worterbuch [Negro English Dictionary]‎[15], archived fromthe original on8 February 2023:
              da boto habi aitilo
              [A boto abi aitilo.]
              The boat has eightoars.

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          Derived fromEnglishrow, ultimately probably fromProto-Germanic*raiwō,*raigwō,*raih-(row, streak, line), fromProto-Indo-European*reyk-(to carve, scratch, etch).

          Alternative forms

          [edit]
          • ro(obsolete)

          Noun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. row(a line of objects of people)
            • 1855, Hendrik Charles Focke,Neger-Engelsch woordenboek [Negro English Dictionary]‎[16], Leiden: P.H. van den Heuvell:
              Dem práni álla na wanro
              [Den prani ala na wanlo]
              They planted everything in arow.
          2. multitude, a great amount or number
          3. (obsolete)gang
            • 1783, C. L. Schumann,Neger-Englisches Worterbuch [Negro English Dictionary]‎[17], archived fromthe original on8 February 2023:
              tideh wan tarralo Ningre dorro agehn
              [Tide wan tralo nengre doro agen.]
              [original:heute ist schon wieder eine andreBande Neger angekommen.]
              Yet anothergang of Negroes arrived today.
          4. (obsolete)herd,pack, a(a group of animals)
            • 1783, C. L. Schumann,Neger-Englisches Worterbuch [Negro English Dictionary]‎[18], archived fromthe original on8 February 2023:
              wanlo pingo
              [original:eineHeerde, ein Zug, Schwarm wilde Schweine.]
              Aherd of white-lipped peccaries.
          Derived terms
          [edit]

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          Probably fromEwehlɔ̃(revenge; group of (maternal) relatives responsible for exacting revenge, clan).[1][2] Cognate ofSaramaccanlɔ́,Aukan.

          Noun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. tribe,clan

          Etymology 4

          [edit]

          Likely fromEnglishlow, ultimately fromProto-Germanic*lēgaz(lying, flat, situated near the ground, low), fromProto-Indo-European*legʰ-(to lie).Doublet oflagi.

          Adjective

          [edit]

          lo

          1. (obsolete)flat,low-lying
            • 1783, C. L. Schumann,Neger-Englisches Worterbuch [Negro English Dictionary]‎[19], archived fromthe original on8 February 2023:
              da grunn delo
              [A gron delo.]
              The piece of land is low-lying.
          Derived terms
          [edit]

          References

          [edit]
          1. ^Norval Smith (2009), “A preliminary list of probable Gbe lexical items in the Surinam Creoles”, inP. Muysken, N. Smith, editors,Surviving the Middle Passage: The West Africa-Surinam Sprachbund, Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton,→ISBN, page469.
          2. ^Klaus Hamberger (2009), “Matrilinéarité et culte des aïeules chez les Éwé [Matrilinearity and Ancestress Cults among the Ewe]”, inJournal des africanistes[2], volume79, number 1, Paris:Société des africanistes,→ISSN, retrieved8 January 2024, pages241-279.

          Swahili

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Interjection

          [edit]

          lo

          1. oh!

          Swedish

          [edit]
          SwedishWikipedia has an article on:
          Wikipediasv
          en lo

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Inherited fromOld Swedish, fromOld Norselóa, derived from or related toProto-Germanic*luhsaz.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          lo c

          1. lynx
            Synonyms:lodjur,lokatt

          Declension

          [edit]
          Declension oflo
          nominativegenitive
          singularindefinitelolos
          definitelonlons
          pluralindefiniteloarloars
          definiteloarnaloarnas

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          Interjection

          [edit]

          lo

          1. (slang)An intensifier put at the end of a sentence.

          References

          [edit]

          Anagrams

          [edit]

          Tok Pisin

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Derived fromEnglishlaw.

          Noun

          [edit]

          lo

          1. law

          Vietnamese

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

            Non-Sino-Vietnamese reading ofChinese(be concerned; worry about,SV:lự).

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Verb

            [edit]

            lo (𢗼,𢥈)

            1. tobother; toworry
              "Taylorồichâncũnglo""Taylor'sHands and Feet Are AllNervy" (a1964 Nhân Dân article byHồ Chí Minh)
            2. toattend to; tocare for

            Derived terms

            [edit]

            Welsh

            [edit]

            Noun

            [edit]

            lo m

            1. soft mutation ofllo

            Mutation

            [edit]
            Mutated forms ofllo
            radicalsoftnasalaspirate
            llolounchangedunchanged

            Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
            All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

            Noun

            [edit]

            lo m

            1. soft mutation ofglo

            Mutation

            [edit]
            Mutated forms ofglo
            radicalsoftnasalaspirate
            glolonglounchanged

            Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
            All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

            West Makian

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Conjunction

            [edit]

            lo

            1. and
              Muhammadlo HasanMuhammadand Hasan
              namu de esilo ifachicken eggsand kenari nuts
            2. (coordinating)and
              imaa melo ido mehe made a grab for itand caught it
            3. forms composite numbers
              awoinye lo minyeeleven (literally, “ten and one”)
              atus siwe lo awoisiwe lo siwenine hundred and ninety-nine (literally, “nine hundred and ninety and nine”)

            References

            [edit]
            • Clemens Voorhoeve (1982),The Makian languages and their neighbours[20], Pacific linguistics

            Wutunhua

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            Borrowed fromTibetanལོ(lo).

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Noun

            [edit]

            lo

            1. year
              Synonym:nian

            References

            [edit]
            • Erika Sandman (2016),A Grammar of Wutun[21], University of Helsinki (PhD),→ISBN

            Xhosa

            [edit]

            Etymology 1

            [edit]

            (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Pronoun

            [edit]

            1. this;class 1 proximal demonstrative.

            Etymology 2

            [edit]

            (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Pronoun

            [edit]

            1. this;class 3 proximal demonstrative.

            Etymology 3

            [edit]

            Pronoun

            [edit]

            -lo

            1. Combining stem oflona.

            Yoruba

            [edit]

            Etymology 1

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Verb

            [edit]

            1. (transitive) touse; toengage; toexploit
            Usage notes
            [edit]
            • lo before a direct object
            Derived terms
            [edit]

            Etymology 2

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Verb

            [edit]

            1. to becomeparboiled(specifically relating to yam tubers in the process of making yam flour,èlùbọ́)
              Synonym:bọ̀
              èlùbọ́ tiThe yam tuber used to prepare èlùbọ́ has becomeparboiled
            Usage notes
            [edit]
            • lo before a direct object
            Derived terms
            [edit]

            Etymology 3

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Verb

            [edit]

            1. to becomebendable orflexible
              Synonym:rọ̀
            Usage notes
            [edit]
            • lo before a direct object
            Derived terms
            [edit]

            Etymology 4

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Verb

            [edit]

            1. toloseinterest in something; to becomedisheartened
              Synonyms:,gọ́
            Derived terms
            [edit]

            Zaniza Zapotec

            [edit]

            Noun

            [edit]

            lo

            1. eye

            Zhuang

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Etymology 1

            [edit]

            Particle

            [edit]

            lo (1957–1982 spellinglo)

            1. Used at the end of a sentence to indicate a change of state or a new situation.
              • 2016,Gij Baujcingq Moq Caeuq Geij Bonj Gij Baujcingq Daeuzdaeuz [The New Testament with A Few Books of the Old Testament], Hong Kong: New Bridge Publishing Company Limited,→ISBN, Lizsij dih Gaihcij[Genesis] 1:3:
                Gajlaeng Cangqdiq naeuz: “Rongh!” Yiengq couh doq miz ronghlo.
                And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.
            2. Used at the end of a sentence to express affirmation or conclusiveness.

            Etymology 2

            [edit]

            Noun

            [edit]

            lo (Sawndip form⿰女卢,1957–1982 spellinglo)

            1. (dialectal)daughter-in-law

            Etymology 3

            [edit]

            Verb

            [edit]

            lo (Sawndip form⿰口卢,1957–1982 spellinglo)

            1. (dialectal) toworry; to beanxious

            Zou

            [edit]
            Lo.

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Noun

            [edit]

            1. basket

            References

            [edit]
            • Lukram Himmat Singh (2013),A Descriptive Grammar of Zou, Canchipur: Manipur University, page40

            Zulu

            [edit]

            Etymology 1

            [edit]

            (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Pronoun

            [edit]

            lo

            1. this;class 1 proximal demonstrative.
            Inflection
            [edit]
            Stem-ló (locativekulo)
            full form
            locativekulo
            copulativeyilo
            Possessive forms
            modifiersubstantive
            class 1waloowalo
            class 2baloabalo
            class 3waloowalo
            class 4yaloeyalo
            class 5laloelalo
            class 6aloawalo
            class 7saloesalo
            class 8zaloezalo
            class 9yaloeyalo
            class 10zaloezalo
            class 11lwaloolwalo
            class 14baloobalo
            class 15kwalookwalo
            class 17kwalookwalo

            Etymology 2

            [edit]

            (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

            Pronunciation

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            Pronoun

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            lo

            1. this;class 3 proximal demonstrative.
            Inflection
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            Stem-ló (locativekulo)
            full form
            locativekulo
            copulativeyilo
            Possessive forms
            modifiersubstantive
            class 1waloowalo
            class 2baloabalo
            class 3waloowalo
            class 4yaloeyalo
            class 5laloelalo
            class 6aloawalo
            class 7saloesalo
            class 8zaloezalo
            class 9yaloeyalo
            class 10zaloezalo
            class 11lwaloolwalo
            class 14baloobalo
            class 15kwalookwalo
            class 17kwalookwalo

            Etymology 3

            [edit]

            See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Pronoun

            [edit]

            lo

            1. Combining stem oflona.

            References

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            Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=lo&oldid=88187560"
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