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Ōe
1[ oh-ey ]
noun
- Ken·za·bu·ro [ken-zah-, boor, -oh], 1935–2023, Japanese novelist and short-story writer noted for works of sociopolitical significance: Nobel Prize in Literature 1994.
Oe
2abbreviation for
- oersted; oersteds.
OE
3abbreviation for
- Commerce. omissions excepted.
o.e.
4abbreviation for
- omissions excepted.
o.e.
1abbreviation for
- omissions excepted
OE
2abbreviation for
- Old English (language)
Oë
3/ ˈaʊi /
noun
- OëKenzaburo1935MJapaneseWRITING: novelistWRITING: writer Kenzaburo (kɛnzəˈbʊrəʊ). born 1935, Japanese novelist and writer; his books include The Catch (1958), A Personal Matter (1964), and Silent Cry (1989): Nobel prize for literature 1994
Oe
4symbol for
- oersted
Example Sentences
From that same part of the world, not far from the Highlands, we get the word OE, a whirlwind off OF the Faroe Islands.
Kogito Choko, modeled on Oe, becomes obsessed with tapes made by his lifelong friend before he committed suicide.
Oe explores themes of nationalism and post-war Japan, as well as the complex relationship between friends.
The German long e is represented by , oe, ae, and in Slavic and Hebrew words also by ee.
The simple infinitive after leouere is noteworthy: the reading of N represents the normal OE.
Hhliche spilede: Madden translates nobly diverted themselves, with the usual meaning of OE.
A letter "p with tilde above" was used twice in OE as an abbreviation for pence; this ebook uses "p" instead.
If it be desired to arrange them as ae, oe, ue, they must be so written.
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