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o

O is the fifteenth letter of the Latin alphabet and a vowel used in many languages. In English its name is commonly pronounced as "oh," and it appears in both uppercase O and lowercase o. The letter is visually a circular or nearly circular shape.

Etymology and history

The Latin O derives from the Greek letter omicron, which means "small o" to distinguish it from

Linguistic and orthographic use

As a vowel, O represents a range of vocalic sounds across languages, with pronunciation varying by dialect

Scientific and mathematical usage

In science, O is the chemical symbol for oxygen, the third most abundant element in the universe

Other contexts

In astronomy, spectral class O denotes very hot, blue stars. In typography and digital text, O and

omega,
meaning
"large
o."
The
form
was
transmitted
to
the
Latin
alphabet
through
the
Etruscans
and
later
adapted
into
modern
alphabets
used
today.
and
word.
Many
languages
employ
diacritics
with
O
to
mark
distinct
sounds,
such
as
ó,
ö,
õ,
ō,
or
ô,
reflecting
diverse
phonologies.
The
letter
also
appears
in
digraphs
and
loanwords
and
may
serve
as
a
grammatical
or
phonetic
marker
in
some
writing
systems.
and
essential
to
most
forms
of
life.
Its
diatomic
form
is
O2.
In
mathematics
and
computer
science,
Big-O
notation
describes
an
upper
bound
on
growth
or
complexity,
as
in
O(n).
The
orthogonal
group,
denoted
O(n),
comprises
rotations
and
reflections
preserving
distances
in
n-dimensional
space.
o
have
specific
Unicode
code
points,
U+004F
for
uppercase
and
U+006F
for
lowercase.
The
letter
also
appears
as
an
interjection
in
some
historical
texts
and
as
a
basic
symbol
of
a
circle
in
various
symbolic
contexts.