sho
( international standards ) ISO 639-3 language code forShanga . sho (notcomparable )
( Southern US , African-American Vernacular ) Pronunciation spelling ofsure .1952 ,Ralph Ellison ,Invisible Man , Penguin Books (2014), page97 :“Isho am glad. Yousho you all right? I thoughtsho you was dead this time.”
( childish ) Pronunciation spelling ofso .Borrowed fromJapanese 笙 ( shō ) .
sho (plural shos )
AJapanese free reed musical instrument similar to the Chinesesheng .Alternative form: shō 2015 , J. Kenneth Moore, Jayson Kerr Dobney, E Bradley Strachen-Scherer,Musical Instruments: Highlights of The Metropolitan Museum of Art ,→ISBN ,page120 :The arrangement of pipes symbolizes the folded wings of the mythical phoenix, whose cry theshō ' s sound is said to represent.
Of modern scholarly coinage. From itsBactrian pronunciation/ʃ/ , and the final omricon (ο ) found at the end of almost all Bactrian words.
sho (plural shos )
Aletter of theGreek alphabet used to write theBactrian language: uppercaseϷ , lowercaseϸ . FromEnglish sure .
sho
sure very sho
surely Synonym: fuh sho Borrowed fromEnglish sho , used to illustrateBactrian ϸ ( š ) . Also compare the archaic Greek characterϺ ( S ) .
sho m or f (invariable )
sho (Greek letter)sho
Thehiragana syllableしょ ( sho ) or thekatakana syllableショ ( sho ) inHepburn romanization. Inherited fromFrench chaud ( “ hot ” ) .
sho
hot Albert Valdman,Dictionary of Louisiana Creole Thomas A. Klingler,If I Could Turn My Tongue Like that: The Creole of Pointe Coupee Parish sho
( chiefly Northern ) alternative form ofsche sho (plural shon )
alternative form ofscho ( “ shoe ” ) sho
alternative form ofschon ( “ to shoe ” ) FromProto-Athabaskan *šʊx̣ .[ 1]
sho
frost Tłʼéédą́ą́ʼ sho yiigaii jiní. It frosted last night, I hear. ^ Leer, Jeff (1996 ),Comparative Athabaskan Lexicon [1] , volume shi-shu, Alaska Native Language Archive, page99 IPA (key ) : /ˈʃo/ [ˈʃo] Rhymes:-o Syllabification:sho ¡sho!
( Guatemala , colloquial ) shush !,hush !( Guatemala , colloquial ) wow !,whoa !sho
( Rioplatense ) Pronunciation spelling ofyo .FromProto-Bantu *-tɪ̀o , derived fromProto-Bantu *-tɪ̀ ( “ say, quote ” ) .
-sho
tosay This verb needs aninflection-table template .
Perhapsborrowed fromSerbo-Croatian ćao .
sho
( slang ) hi Often in "Shobre !" (Hi, bro!). Usually pronounced identically to the native greetingtjo . bre hej (has a list of greetings and farewells)FromProto-Bantu *-tɪ̀o , derived fromProto-Bantu *-tɪ̀ ( “ say, quote ” ) .
-sho
( intransitive ) tosay ( intransitive ) tomean This verb needs aninflection-table template .