What is the meaning of Ho?

ISO 639-1 language code for Hiri Motu.

Used to attract attention to something sighted, usually by lookouts.

halloo; hey; a call to excite attention, or to give notice of approach.

Said accompanying a vigorous attack.

A stop; a halt; a moderation of pace.

A whore; a sexually promiscuous woman; in general use as a highly offensive term of abuse for a woman with connotations of loose sexuality.

A woman in general; a bitch.

To act as a ho, to prostitute.

Care, anxiety, trouble, sorrow.

To care, be anxious, to long.

friendly interjection used at the end of a phrase when speaking to someone, "bro", "man"

used closing the sentence to bolster the attention of the listener; emphatic

your pl

it ; replaces the demonstrative pronouns açò, això and allò

replaces an independent clause (one which could grammatically form a sentence on its own)

replaces an adjective or an indefinite noun which serves as the predicate of ésser, esdevenir, estar or semblar

they

to go

yes (word used to indicate agreement or acceptance)

1st person nominative pronoun: I; me

stop, hold

Alternative form of who (who, nominative)

Alternative form of he (he)

Alternative form of heo (she)

Alternative form of he (they)

Alternative form of hough (hough, hock)

Alternative form of hough (promontory)

Alternative form of oo (one)

I; me

she (form removed with the spelling reform of 2005; superseded by hun)

she, it (third person singular, feminine)

her

female

first-person singular present indicative of hōn

Alternative spelling of ó

Alternative spelling of ó

water

3 (three)

you

water

ho

accusative of on

accusative of ono

Signifies a hearty laugh.

The name of the Latin-script letter H/h.

oh

Synonym of oho

Used by tamers to calm the animal they are taming, especially horses; whoa

Used to express surprise or shock

used closing the sentence to bolster the attention of the listener; emphatic

first-person singular present indicative of avere (I have)

The hiragana syllable (ho) or the katakana syllable (ho) in Hepburn romanization.

Obsolete spelling of .

Used to calm or stop a domestic animal, especially horses; whoa.

Used to calm down a person.

genitive/accusative of on and ono

a trough; a long container for feeding or watering animals.

a sink; often mounted to a wall; especially a kitchen sink or a washing sink.

who

Alternative form of hon (she)

honorific particle used while speaking to one's superior, elder, or guest

used to stop a horse, usually repeated

the Arabic letter ح

to cough

to boil

to become gaseous, to become boiled

to form bubbles or lather

to roar with noise

to peel off the skin or bark of something

garlic

Source: wiktionary.org