O is the Latin equivalent of 'o' or 'oh' in English. It's an interjection that's meant to express astonishment, joy, or pain. It also refers to the fourteenth letter of the Latin alphabet. It's the Latin equivalent of the Greek letters 'omicron' and 'omega'.
Nocens ;O
O-nay is Pig- (or Dog-) Latin for "no." In Pig-Latin, the first sound of a word is moved to the end, followed by "-ay." Pig-Latin is Igpay-Atinlay
o tempora o mores
um a i orum o is um a o is
O. S. stands for "oculus sinister", which is Latin for "left eye". O. D. stands for "oculus dexter", which is Latin for "right eye".
In Pig Latin you would say, "go to McDonalds" as follows: o-gay o-tay Mc-day-Onalds-ay
Latin
Lavo with a macron over the "o."
"I know" is an English equivalent of the Latin word Sciō. The first person present indicative verb also translates as "I can," "I have knowledge" and "I know (carnally, in the biblical sense)" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "SKEE-o" in classical Latin and "SHEE-o" in Church Latin.
tornado in Latin is turbo turbis with a macron over the "o". turbo is a masculine 2nd declension noun
It is a latin transliteration, meaning "age".
o domine deus