It's a grammatical marker for the object of a sentence.
It implies that the word directly before is the recipient of an action.
logan. what were you reading? o-o
[×]を見た ([×] o mita) means "I saw [×]" in Japanese.
"Who did you learn that Japanese from?"
"What are you doing?"
To accept defeat
need more info to answer this question
アイス /ai su/ can mean both 'ice' and 'ice cream' in Japanese. The word for 'ice' itself in Japanese is 氷 /ko o ri/, romanized 'koori', in which double 'o' indicated long 'o' not 'u' sound.
サマンサ・ニコール : 'samansa nicooru' is the Japanese spelling of that name.[oo = elongated 'o' sound]
You will now be my girlfriend
Significa Montaña o Colina.
------ | O ) | - | O ) ------ I am not Japanese but YES
を (o) designates which part of the sentence is the object:i.e,watashi WA = I = Subjectwatashi o = me = Object