Define:Tho

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English[eedit soorce]

Pronunciation[eedit soorce]

Etymology 1[eedit soorce]

Frae Middle Inglis

tho

,

tha

, frae Old English

, frae Proto-Germanic *þai (those), frae Proto-Indo-European *to-, *só (that).

Article[eedit soorce]

Tho

  1. (obsolete) The (plural form); those.

Pronoun[eedit soorce]

Tho

  1. (obsolete) Those; they.

Etymology 2[eedit soorce]

Frae Middle Inglis

tho

,

tha

, frae Old English þā (then, when), frae Proto-Germanic *þa- (that), frae Proto-Indo-European *to-, *só (that).

Adverb[eedit soorce]

Tho (nae comparable)

  1. (now Template:Context 2) Then; thareupon.
    • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, III.2:
      Tho, her avizing of the vertues rare / Which thereof spoken were, she gan againe / Her to bethink of that mote to her selfe pertaine.

Conjunction[eedit soorce]

Tho

  1. (dialectal) When.

Etymology 3[eedit soorce]

American Inglis; Alteration o

though

.

Adverb[eedit soorce]

tho

  1. (informal, Template:Context 2) Lua error in Module:Form_of/templates at line 167: Please enter a language code in the first parameter..
    • 2009, John Hough, Seen the Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Gettysburg[1], Simon and Schuster, ISBN 9781416589655, page 121:
      I wonder now when I will find time to read it but it is a treasure anyway tho heavy in my knapsack, …

Anagrams[eedit soorce]


Crimean Gothic[eedit soorce]

Etymology[eedit soorce]

Frae Proto-Germanic *sa, *sō, *þat.

Article[eedit soorce]

Tho

  1. the
    • 1562, Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq:
      omnibus vero dictionibus praeponebat articulum tho aut the

Usage notes[eedit soorce]

While it is likely that Crimean Gothic retained grammatical gender, de Busbecq's letter daes nae mention which airticles are uised wi which wirds, makin it impossible tae reconstruct thair gender.


Scots[eedit soorce]

Pronunciation[eedit soorce]

  • /θoː/

Adverb[eedit soorce]

Tho (comparative mair tho, superlative maist tho)

  1. though, however