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ho

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Appendix:Variations of "ho"
Languages (39)
Translingual • English
Asturian • Breton • Catalan • Chickasaw • Czech • Danish • Esperanto • Finnish • French • Galician • Hanunoo • Italian • Japanese • Lower Sorbian • Middle English • Mizo • Muong • Norwegian Bokmål • Norwegian Nynorsk • Old English • Old Irish • Old Javanese • Orya • Paraguayan Guarani • Pyu (Myanmar) • Romanian • Slovak • Swedish • Tagalog • Toba Batak • Tooro • Uzbek • Vietnamese • Warao • Yola • Yoruba • Zhuang
Page categories

Translingual

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Etymology

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Abbreviation ofEnglishHiri Motu.

Symbol

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ho

  1. (international standards)ISO 639-1language code forHiri Motu.

See also

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English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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FromMiddle Englishho,hoo(interjection), fromOld English, probably fromOld Norsehó!(interjection, also, a shepherd's call). CompareDutchho,Germanho,Old Frenchho!(hold!, halt!).

Interjection

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ho

  1. (nautical) Used to attractattention to somethingsighted, usually bylookouts.
    Sailho!Another boat is visible!
    Landho!Land is visible!
    Manho!A town is visible!
  2. halloo;hey; a call to excite attention, or to give notice of approach.
  3. (rare)Said accompanying a vigorous attack.
    • 1900,Ching Foo, the Yellow Dwarf; Or the Bradys and the Opium Smokers, page 2:
      "I'll hit you again, you thief !” he cried angrily, shaking “Ho-ho-ho!” he croaked.
    • 1955, John Sack,From Here to Shimbashi - Volume 637, page172:
      It was quite an astonishing show. Colonel Paul Malone of the U.S. Army kept thwacking away with all his might and main, shouting "Ho!"
    • 1999,Mona the Vampire, "Attack of the Living Scarecrow" (season 1, episode 1a):
      Mona: Hee! Ha!Ho! Ha! The brain buffet is closed, buddy! Take that! And this!
    • 2008, Daniel Hellmund,The Answer for Laria, page93:
      Ho! Take that vile Foresythe!” He snapped his wrist, clicking the stick against the bowed sides of a barrel.
Derived terms
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Translations
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nautical: attention grabber
hey

Noun

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ho

  1. Astop; ahalt; amoderation ofpace.
References
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  • 1996, T.F. Hoad,The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Etymology, Oxford University Press,→ISBN

Etymology 2

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Pronunciation spelling ofwhore innon-rhotic accents with thedough–door merger, such as some varieties ofAfrican American Vernacular English; comparemo(more),fo'(for; four). The noun first appears c. 1964, whereas the verb first appears c. 1972.

Alternative forms

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Noun

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ho (pluralhosorhoesorheaux)

  1. (slang, derogatory) Awhore; asexuallypromiscuouswoman; in general use as a highly offensive term of abuse for a woman withconnotations ofloosesexuality.
    Bros beforehoes!
    • 2001, “Psycho”, inToxicity, performed bySerj Tankian withSystem of a Down:
      So you want to see the show? You really don't have to be aho.
    • 2006, Noire[pseudonym],Thug-A-Licious: An Urban Erotic Tale, New York, N.Y.:One World,Ballantine Books,→ISBN,page204:
      They was saying the jawn freaked out and called the cops cause all her sorority sistahs started ragging on her and calling her a stankho for fucking half the basketball team.
    • 2010, Dennis Shields,God Went Fishing[2], page69:
      "You looking for one of myho's?" the diminutive man asked Sigmund.
      "A hoe?" Sigmund asked, wondering why the little man wished to sell him farming equipment in the city.
      "You know, aho. A tute. A honey, A righteous bit of poontang, my brother," he said.
      "I don't follow," Sigmund said.
      "Indubitably, I means aho, a whore. I can tell you is a player. You want a whore?" he asked.
  2. (slang, offensive) Awoman in general; abitch.
Synonyms
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Derived terms
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Translations
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whore
woman

Verb

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ho (third-person singular simple presenthoes,present participlehoeing,simple past and past participlehoed)

  1. (transitive, intransitive, slang, vulgar) Toact as a ho, toprostitute.
    • 2003 November 18, Greywolf Johnson, “Do you know any of these? <g>”, inalt.strange.days[3] (Usenet):
      She holds down a decent job during the day, but is secretlyhoeing around with at least 5 different trifling men.

Etymology 3

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FromMiddle Englishhowe,houwe,hoȝe, fromOld Englishhogu andhoga, fromProto-Germanic*hugô,*hugiz,*huguz(mind, thought, understanding), akin toOld High Germanhugu, hugi (Middle High Germanhüge),Old Saxonhugi (Middle Dutchhöghe,Dutchheug),Old Norsehugr,Gothic𐌷𐌿𐌲𐍃(hugs).

Alternative forms

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Noun

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ho (pluralhos)

  1. (obsolete)Care,anxiety,trouble,sorrow.
    • 1567,George Turberville, “A. Sani di Cure Aunsweres”, inHeroycall Epistles ofOvid,155v:
      Though there bee A thousand cares that heape myhoe.
    • 1798,Charlotte Turner Smith,The Young Philosopher,I. 195:
      Him that..this gentlewoman is in such ahoe about.
    • 1869-70,William Barnes, “The Widow’s House”, inPoems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect[4]:
      But by day to the zun they must rise
      To their true lives o' tweil an' ovho.
    • 1875, William Douglas Parish,A Dictionary of the Sussex Dialect[5] (at cited word):
      I doänt see as you've any call to putt yourself in no such terrible gurthoe over it.

Etymology 4

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FromMiddle Englishhowen,hoȝen,hogien, fromOld Englishhogian,hugian, fromProto-Germanic*hugjaną. Cognate with Middle Scotshuik,Old High Germanhucken,Old Saxonhuggjan,Dutchheugen,Old Norsehyggja,Gothic𐌷𐌿𐌲𐌾𐌰𐌽(hugjan).

Alternative forms

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Verb

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ho

  1. (obsolete) Tocare, beanxious, tolong.
    • 1787, F. Grose,Provinc. Gloss (at cited word):
      Toho for anything, to long for any thing. Berks.
    • 1847-78, J. O. Halliwell,Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words:
      Ho...to long for anything; to be careful and anxious. West.
    • 1869-70, William Barnes,The Bells of Alderburnham, Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect:
      But still 'tis happiness to know That there's a God above us; An' he, by day an' night doho Vor all ov us an' love us.
    • 1874, T. Hardy,Far from Madding Crowd, II. xxiii. 289:
      Toho and hanker after thik woman.
    • 1888, B. Lowsley,Gloss. Berks. Words & Phrases:
      Ho, to long for; to care greatly for.

Anagrams

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Asturian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Clipping ofhome.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈo/[ˈo]
  • Rhymes:-o
  • Syllabification:ho

Interjection

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ho

  1. friendlyinterjection used at the end of a phrase when speaking to someone, "bro", "man"
    ¿Sabíes eso,ho?
    Did you know that,man?
    Vamos pa mio casa,ho
    Let's go to my place,man
  2. used closing the sentence to bolster the attention of the listener;emphatic
    ¡Apara yá,ho!
    Stop (it) already,man!

Usage notes

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  • This interjection is used very frequently in Asturian, more than Englishman orbro, as such when translating to English many instances of "ho" would not be translated.
  • Although "ho" was originally the adult male form, the children equivalent beingnin, "ho" is now used extensively for either, without taking into account the receptor's gender or age, while "nin" has largely retained its connotations.
  • "Ho" is usually only used at the end of phrases, "home" is used at the beginning.
Eso ye lo qu'hai de facer,hoThat's what you gotta do,man
Home, eso ye lo qu'hai de facerMan, that's what you gotta do

Breton

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Determiner

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ho (requires hard mutation)

  1. your pl
    hopreudeuryour brothers

Catalan

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Etymology

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Inherited fromLatinhoc. CompareOccitano andac.

Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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ho (enclitic and proclitic)

  1. it(direct object);replaces the demonstrative pronounsaçò,això andallò
  2. replaces an independent clause (one which could grammatically form a sentence on its own)
  3. replaces an adjective or an indefinite noun which serves as the predicate ofésser,esdevenir,estar orsemblar

Usage notes

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  • Ho cannot be used with eitheren orhi.
  • ho is the reinforced (reforçada) form of the pronoun. It is used before verbs.
    Ho sabem.We knowthat.
  • -ho is the full (plena) form of the pronoun. It is normally used after verbs.
    Puc fer-ho.I can doit.
    Deixa-ho.Leaveit.

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-.

Derived terms

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proclictic
enclitic

Chickasaw

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Pronoun

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ho

  1. they

Czech

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Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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ho m orn

  1. accusative ofon
    Synonym:jej
  2. accusative ofono

Danish

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Interjection

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ho

  1. (onomatopoeia)Signifies a hearty laugh.

See also

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Esperanto

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Etymology

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FromYiddishהאָ(ho).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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ho (accusative singularho-on,pluralho-oj,accusative pluralho-ojn)

  1. The name of theLatin script letterH/h.

See also

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Interjection

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ho

  1. oh

See also

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Finnish

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Etymology

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CompareKarelianho. An interjection that is found in many languages.[1]

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈho/,[ˈho̞]
  • Rhymes:-o
  • Syllabification(key):ho
  • Hyphenation(key):ho

Interjection

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ho

  1. synonym ofoho

References

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  1. ^Erkki Itkonen, Ulla-Maija Kulonen, editors (1992–2000),Suomen sanojen alkuperä [The Origin of Finnish Words]‎[1] (in Finnish) (online version; note: also includes other etymological sources; this source is labeled "SSA 1992–2000"), Helsinki: Institute for the Languages of Finland/Finnish Literature Society,→ISBN

French

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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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Interjection

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ho

  1. Used bytamers to calm the animal they are taming, especially horses;whoa
    Ho ! Tout doux !Whoa! Easy!
  2. Used to expresssurprise orshock
    Ho mon Dieu !Oh my God!

Further reading

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Galician

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Etymology

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Fromhome(man).

Pronunciation

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Interjection

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ho!

  1. used closing the sentence to bolster the attention of the listener;emphatic
    Para,ho!Stop!
    Non o volvo facer! Nonho!I'm not doing this again! No way!

References

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Hanunoo

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Etymology 1

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FromProto-Malayo-Polynesian*həqə(yes; expression of agreement).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈhuʔ/[ˈhoʔ]
  • Rhymes:-uʔ
  • Syllabification:ho

Interjection

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(Hanunoo spellingᜱᜳ)

  1. yes(word used to indicate agreement or acceptance)
Alternative forms
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Etymology 2

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈhu/[ˈho]
  • Rhymes:-u
  • Syllabification:ho

Pronoun

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ho (Hanunoo spellingᜱᜳ)(literary)

  1. 1st person nominative pronoun:I;me
    Synonyms:ako,(literary)kaa
Alternative forms
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Further reading

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  • Conklin, Harold C. (1953),Hanunóo-English Vocabulary (University of California Publications in Linguistics), volume 9, London, England: University of California Press,→OCLC,page128

Italian

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Alternative forms

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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ho

  1. first-personsingularpresentindicative ofavere and(obsolete)havere

References

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  1. ^ho inLuciano Canepari,Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)

Japanese

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Romanization

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ho

  1. Thehiragana syllable(ho) or thekatakana syllable(ho) inHepburn romanization.

Lower Sorbian

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Preposition

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ho

  1. obsolete spelling of

Middle English

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Etymology 1

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Probably fromOld Norsehó!(interjection, also, a shepherd's call).

Alternative forms

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Pronunciation

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Interjection

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ho

  1. stop,hold
Descendants
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References
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Etymology 2

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Pronoun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofwho(who,nominative)

Etymology 3

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Pronoun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofhe(he)

Etymology 4

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Pronoun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofheo(she)

Etymology 5

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Pronoun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofhe(they)

Etymology 6

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Noun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofhough(hough, hock)

Etymology 7

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Noun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofhough(promontory)

Etymology 8

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Noun

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ho

  1. alternative form ofoo(one)

Mizo

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Etymology 1

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    Adjective

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    ho

    1. brittle
    2. rude,mean
    3. at aloss for words

    Etymology 2

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      Verb

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      ho

      1. to bein charge,look after
      Derived terms
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      Further reading

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      Muong

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      Alternative forms

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      Pronunciation

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      Request for audio pronunciationThis entry needs anaudio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, pleaserecord this word. The recorded pronunciationwill appear here when it's ready.

      Pronoun

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      ho

      1. (Mường Bi)I;me

      Norwegian Bokmål

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      Etymology

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      FromOld Norsehon.

      Pronunciation

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      Pronoun

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      ho (accusativehenne,genitivehennes)

      1. (nonstandard, dialectal)she (form removed with thespelling reform of 2005;superseded byhun)

      Norwegian Nynorsk

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

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      Etymology 1

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      FromOld Norsehón, fromProto-Germanic*hēnō (compare*ainaz). Cognate withIcelandichún,Danishhun andSwedishhon.

      Alternative forms

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      Dialectal forms

      Pronoun

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      ho (accusativehoorhenne,genitivehennar)

      1. she,it (third person singular, feminine)
        Ho er bestevenninna mi.She is my best friend.
      2. her
        Synonym:henne
        Eg ser ho.I seeher.
      Usage notes
      [edit]

      Unlike other Scandinavian languages, Nynorskho is used to refer not only to feminine persons, but any feminine noun. E.g.:Boka er god. Eg likarho.(The book is good. I likeit.)

      In some dialects,ho may precede a female given name or a definite singular feminine noun. E.g:e(r)ho mang(e)ho klokka no?(what time is it now?);det erho Stine som kjem jo!(It is Stine who is coming (over there)!)

      See also

      [edit]
      Norwegian Nynorsk personal pronouns
      first personsecond personreflexivethird person
      masculinefeminineneuter
      singularnominativeeg,je1duhanhodet,dat2
      accusativemegdegseghan,honomho,hennedet,dat2
      dative2megdegseghonomhennedi2
      genitivemindinsinhanshennar,hennes1dess3
      pluralnominativeme,vide,dokkerdei
      accusativeoss,okkdykk,dokkersegdei,deim2
      dativeoss,okkdykk,dokkersegdeim2
      genitivevår,okkardykkar,dokkarsindeira,deires1

      1Obsolete.2Landsmål.3Rare or literary. Italic forms unofficial today.

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Alternative forms

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      Noun

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      ho f (definite singularhoa,indefinite pluralhoer,definite pluralhoene)

      1. female
        Hoa legg egga oppe i eit tre.Thefemale lays the eggs up in a tree.

      References

      [edit]

      Old English

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Inflection ofhōn.

      Verb

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      1. first-personsingularpresentindicative ofhōn

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Probably fromOld Norsehó!(interjection, also, a shepherd's call). CompareDutchho,Germanho,Old Frenchho!(hold!, halt!).

      Interjection

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      ho

      1. Call of attention.
      2. Hey!

      Descendants

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      Old Irish

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      Conjunction

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      ho

      1. alternative spelling ofó

      Preposition

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      ho

      1. alternative spelling ofó

      Old Javanese

      [edit]

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

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

      Particle

      [edit]

      ho

      1. an exclamation
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

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

      Noun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. areca,coconut palm
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      Inherited fromProto-Austronesian*hawan(atmosphere, space between earth and sky).

      Root

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      ho

      1. clear
      Derived terms
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      Orya

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      Noun

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      ho

      1. water

      References

      [edit]

      Paraguayan Guarani

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited fromProto-Tupi-Guarani*t͡so.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]
      Request for audio pronunciationThis entry needs anaudio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, pleaserecord this word. The recorded pronunciationwill appear here when it's ready.

      Verb

      [edit]

      ho (active,intransitive,irregular)

      1. togo
        Cheaháta che rógape.
        I amgoing home.

      Conjugation

      [edit]

      References

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      Pyu (Myanmar)

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromProto-Sino-Tibetan*kV-sum.

      Pronunciation

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      Numeral

      [edit]

      1. 3 (three)

      See also

      [edit]
      • (Pyu digits):

      Romanian

      [edit]

      Interjection

      [edit]

      ho

      1. Used to calm or stop a domestic animal, especially horses;whoa.
        Ho! Ușor!Whoa! Easy!
      2. (vulgar)Used to calm down a person.
        Ho! Nu mai țipa !Whoa! Stop screaming!

      Slovak

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      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. genitive/accusative ofon andono

      Swedish

      [edit]
      SwedishWikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipediasv

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ho c

      1. atrough; a longcontainer forfeeding orwateringanimals.
      2. asink; oftenmounted to awall; especially akitchen sink or awashing sink.
        Synonym:diskho
      Declension
      [edit]
      Declension ofho
      nominativegenitive
      singularindefinitehohos
      definitehonhons
      pluralindefinitehoarhoars
      definitehoarnahoarnas
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      See also

      [edit]
      • slasktratt(sink (for discharging wastewater))

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Seevem.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. (archaic)who
        • 1541,Gustav Vasa Bible,Esaiah,40:13-14
          Hoo vnderwisar HERRANS anda/ och hwadh rådhgiffuare lärer honom? Hwem fråghar han om rådh, then honom förstånd giffuer/ och lärer honom rettzens wägh/ och lärer honom klookheet och wijsar honom förståndzens wägh?
          (1873 edition)Ho undervisar Herrans Anda; och hvad rådgifvare lärer honom? Hvem frågar han om råd, den honom förstånd gifver, och lärer honom rättsens väg, och lärer honom klokhet, och viser honom förståndsens väg?
          Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord, or being his counsellor hath taught him? With whom took he counsel, and who instructed him, and taught him in the path of judgment, and taught him knowledge, and shewed to him the way of understanding?
        Ho äst du?
        Who art thou?
      Usage notes
      [edit]
      • In earlier Swedish,ho was thenominative case form ofvem (spelthvem), corresponding to the difference between Englishwho andwhom. Unlike in English, where the oblique form gives way to the nominative, the reverse has happened in Swedish.
      Related terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      Seehon.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. (dialectal)alternative form ofhon(she)

      References

      [edit]

      Tagalog

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

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

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Particle

      [edit]

      (Baybayin spellingᜑᜓ)

      1. (familiar)honorific particle used while speaking to one's superior, elder, or guest
        Synonym:po
        Taga-saan namanho kayo?Where are you from,sir/madam?
      Usage notes
      [edit]
      • The word does not appear at a beginning of a sentence unless used alone.
      • The wordho is used more on informal, familiar or conversational contexts thanpo. On some dialects, this is not observed and may even be more used thanpo.
      Derived terms
      [edit]
      Related terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Interjection

      [edit]

      ho (Baybayin spellingᜑᜓ)

      1. used to stop a horse, usually repeated
      See also
      [edit]

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • ho”, inPambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph,2018

      Anagrams

      [edit]

      Toba Batak

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromProto-Malayo-Polynesian*(i-)kahu, compareMalaykau andTetumó.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. you

      Tooro

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. class 16 of-o:it

      Derived terms

      [edit]
      • -aho(its (class 16))

      See also

      [edit]
      Tooro personal pronouns
      classpersonindependentpossessivesubject
      concord
      object
      concord
      combined forms
      nani
      class 1firstnyowe,nye-angen--n-nanyowe,nanyeninyowe,ninye
      secondiwe-aweo--ku-naiweniiwe
      thirduwe-ea--mu-nawenuwe
      class 2firstitwe-aitutu--tu-naitweniitwe
      secondinywe-anyumu--ba-nainyweniinywe
      thirdbo-aboba--ba-nabonubo
      class 3gwo-agwogu--gu-nagwonugwo
      class 4yo-ayoe--gi-nayoniyo
      class 5lyo-alyoli--li-nalyoniryo
      class 6go-agoga--ga-nagonugo
      class 7kyo-akyoki--ki-nakyonikyo
      class 8byo-abyobi--bi-nabyonibyo
      class 9yo-ayoe--gi-nayoniyo
      class 10zo-azozi--zi-nazonizo
      class 11rwo-arworu--ru-narwonurwo
      class 12ko-akoka--ka-nakonuko
      class 13two-atwotu--tu-natwonutwo
      class 14bwo-abwobu--bu-nabwonubwo
      class 15kwo-akwoku--ku-nakwonukwo
      class 16ho-ahoha--ha-nahonuho
      class 17(kwo)N/Aha-
      (...-yo)
      -ha-N/Anukwo
      class 18(mwo)-amwoha-
      (...-mu)
      -ha-N/Anumwo
      reflexive-enyini,-onyini-e-

      Uzbek

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Borrowed fromArabicحَاء(ḥāʔ).

      Noun

      [edit]

      ho (pluralholar)

      1. the Arabic letterح

      Declension

      [edit]
      Declension ofho
      singularplural
      nominativehoholar
      genitivehoningholarning
      dativehogaholarga
      definite accusativehoniholarni
      locativehodaholarda
      ablativehodanholardan
      similativehodekholardek
      Possessive forms ofho
      1st person singular
      singularplural
      nominativehoimholarim
      genitivehoimningholarimning
      dativehoimgaholarimga
      definite accusativehoimniholarimni
      locativehoimdaholarimda
      ablativehoimdanholarimdan
      similativehoimdekholarimdek
      2nd person singular
      singularplural
      nominativehoingholaring
      genitivehoingningholaringning
      dativehoinggaholaringga
      definite accusativehoingniholaringni
      locativehoingdaholaringda
      ablativehoingdanholaringdan
      similativehoingdekholaringdek
      3rd person singular
      singularplural
      nominativehoiholari
      genitivehoiningholarining
      dativehoigaholariga
      definite accusativehoiniholarini
      locativehoidaholarida
      ablativehoidanholaridan
      similativehoidekholaridek
      1st person plural
      singularplural
      nominativehoimizholarimiz
      genitivehoimizningholarimizning
      dativehoimizgaholarimizga
      definite accusativehoimizniholarimizni
      locativehoimizdaholarimizda
      ablativehoimizdanholarimizdan
      similativehoimizdekholarimizdek
      2nd person plural
      singularplural
      nominativehoingizholaringiz
      genitivehoingizningholaringizning
      dativehoingizgaholaringizga
      definite accusativehoingizniholaringizni
      locativehoingizdaholaringizda
      ablativehoingizdanholaringizdan
      similativehoingizdekholaringizdek
      3rd person plural
      singularplural
      nominativehoiholari
      genitivehoiningholarining
      dativehoigaholariga
      definite accusativehoiniholarini
      locativehoidaholarida
      ablativehoidanholaridan
      similativehoidekholaridek

      Vietnamese

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromProto-Vietic*hɔː.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      ho ()

      1. tocough

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Warao

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ho

      1. water

      Descendants

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]

      Yola

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromMiddle Englishho, fromOld Norse.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Interjection

      [edit]

      ho

      1. ho
        • 1867, “A YOLA ZONG”, inSONGS, ETC. IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY, number13, page90:
          Ha-ho! be mee coshes, th'ast ee-pait it, co Joane;
          Hey-ho! by my conscience, you have paid it, quoth John;

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]
      • Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828), William Barnes, editor,A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, published1867,page90

      Yoruba

      [edit]
      Omi tó ń

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]
      Request for audio pronunciationThis entry needs anaudio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, pleaserecord this word. The recorded pronunciationwill appear here when it's ready.

      Verb

      [edit]

      1. (transitive, of liquids) toboil
      2. (intransitive, of liquids) tobecomegaseous, to becomeboiled
      3. toformbubbles orlather
      4. toroar withnoise
        òkún ń yee; ọ̀sà ń mì lẹ̀gbẹ̀The sea wasroaring; the lagoon was swaying majestically
      Derived terms
      [edit]
      Related terms
      [edit]
      • bọ́(to cook in boiling water)

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      1. (transitive) topeeloff theskin orbark ofsomething
        Synonym:
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Zhuang

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Cognate withBouyeihol(garlic).

      Thisetymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]
      Request for audio pronunciationThis entry needs anaudio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, pleaserecord this word. The recorded pronunciationwill appear here when it's ready.

      Noun

      [edit]

      ho (1957–1982 spellingho)

      1. garlic
        Synonym:suenq

      Derived terms

      [edit]
      Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=ho&oldid=89538379"
      Categories:
      Hidden categories:

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