| BO | • bo interj. An exclamation used to startle or frighten. • bo n. (US, slang) Fellow, chap, boy. • bo n. (Martial arts) A quarterstaff, especially in an oriental context. |
| DO | • do v. (Auxiliary) A syntactic marker. • do v. (Transitive) To perform; to execute. • do v. (Obsolete, transitive) To cause, make (someone) (do something). |
| GO | • go v. To move… • go v. (Intransitive, chiefly of a machine) To work or function (properly); to move or perform (as required). • go v. (Intransitive) To start; to begin (an action or process). |
| HO | • ho interj. (Nautical) Used to attract attention to something sighted, usually by lookouts. • ho interj. Halloo; hey; a call to excite attention, or to give notice of approach. • ho interj. (Rare) Said accompanying a vigorous attack. |
| IO | • io n. A type of moth, the io moth. • io interj. (Rare) An exclamation of joy or triumph. • io sym. (International standards) ISO 639-1 language code for Ido. |
| JO | • jo n. (Scotland) Darling, sweetheart. • jo n. The staff used in the Japanese martial art of jodo or jojutsu. • Jo prop.n. A female given name. |
| KO | • ko n. (Game of Go) A local shape to which the ko rule applies; a ko shape. • ko n. (Game of Go) ko fight. • ko n. (Game of Go) a stone in a ko in atari, a ko stone. |
| LO | • lo interj. (Archaic) look, see, behold (in an imperative sense). • lo adj. Informal spelling of low. • lo cont. (Colloquial) hello (’lo; see hallo). |
| MO | • mo adv. (Obsolete) To a greater degree. • mo adv. (Now dialectal) Further, longer. • mo adj. (Archaic, dialectal) Greater in amount, quantity, or number (of discrete objects, as opposed to more… |
| NO | • no det. Not any. • no det. Hardly any. • no det. Not any possibility or allowance of (doing something). |
| OO | • oo n. Any of four Hawaiian birds of the genus Moho, formerly classed with the honeyeaters and now believed to be extinct. • oo interj. Alternative form of ooh. • OO n. Alternative letter-case form of oo. |
| PO | • po n. (Obsolete) A peacock. • po n. (UK, Australia, New Zealand, colloquial, dated) A chamberpot. • Po prop.n. The longest river in Italy, which flows 652 kilometers eastward to the Adriatic Sea near Venice. |
| SO | • so conj. Reduced form of ’so that’, used to express purpose; in order that. • so conj. With the result that; for that reason; therefore. • so conj. Used to connect previous conversation or events to the following question. |
| TO | • to part. A particle used for marking the following verb as an infinitive. • to part. As above, with the verb implied. • to part. Used to indicate an obligation on the part of, or a directive given to, the subject. |
| WO | • wo interj. A falconer’s call to a hawk. • wo interj. A call to cause a horse to slow down or stop; whoa. • wo n. Obsolete spelling of woe. |
| YO | • yo interj. (Slang) A greeting similar to hi. • yo interj. (Slang) An interjection similar to hey. • yo interj. (Slang) An expression of surprise or excitement. |
| ZO | • zo n. Alternative spelling of dzo. • Zo n. An indigenous people of Burma (Myanmar) and north-east India. • Zo prop.n. A language spoken in Myanmar and India, especially in Chin State, Mizoram and Manipur, and adjoining… |