int. 哦;哎呀(表示惊讶或恐惧等)
英 [əʊ]美 [o]
权威例句
- He goes to me: "Oh, what do you want?"
他问我:“哦,你想要什么?”
来自柯林斯例句 - The policeman smiled at her. "Pretty dog."— "Oh well, thank you."
警察冲她笑了笑,“这狗真漂亮。”——“哦,谢谢。”
来自柯林斯例句 - I've been here, oh, since the end of June.
我是,呃,6月底来到这里的。
来自柯林斯例句 - "Oh, Gairdner," he said, as if that meant something to him.
“哦,盖尔德纳,”他说道,好像他听说过这个名字。
来自柯林斯例句 - "How much is he paying you?" — "Oh, five thousand." —"Not bad."
“他给你多少钱?”——“哦,5,000。”——“挺不错嘛。”
来自柯林斯例句
英语词源
1530s, interjection expressing various emotions, a common Indo-European word (Old French ô;, oh; Latin o, oh; Greek o; Old Church Slavonic and Lithuanian o; Gothic, Dutch, German o; Old Irish a; Sanskrit a), but not found in Old English, which translated Latin oh with la or eala.
The present tendency is to restrict oh to places where it has a certain independence, & prefer o where it is proclitic or leans forward upon what follows .... [Fowler]
Often extended for emphasis, as in Oh, baby, stock saying from c. 1918; oh, boy (1910); oh, yeah (1924). Reduplicated form oh-oh as an expression of alarm or dismay is attested from 1944. Oh-so "so very" (often sarcastic or ironic) is from 1922. Oh yeah? "really? Is that so?" attested from 1930.