释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024o•lé /oʊˈleɪ/USA pronunciation interj., n., pl. o•lés. interj. - Foreign Terms(a Spanish cheer used to express approval, triumph, or encouragement).
n. [countable] - Foreign Termsa cry of "olé.''
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024o•lé (ō lā′),USA pronunciation interj. - Foreign Terms(used as a shout of approval, triumph, or encouragement).
n. - Foreign Termsa cry of "olé.''
- Spanish (h)ole, probably of expressive origin, originally
-ole1 : - a suffix found in French loanwords of Latin origin, usually diminutives, and later in adaptations of words borrowed directly from Latin or in Neo-Latin coinages:areole;centriole;vacuole.
- Latin -olus, -ola, -olum, variant of -ulus -ule with stems ending in a vowel
- French
-ole2 : - Chemistrya suffix used in names of chemical compounds, esp. five-membered, unsaturated rings (carbazole;
indole; thiazole) and, less systematically, aromatic ethers (anisole; safrole). Also, -ol 2.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: -ole, -ol n combining form - denoting an organic unsaturated compound containing a 5-membered ring: thiazole
- denoting an aromatic organic ether: anisole
Etymology: from Latin oleum oil, from Greek elaion, from elaia olive -ole suffix - indicating something small: arteriole
Etymology: from Latin -olus, diminutive suffix Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: OLE abbreviation for - object linking and embedding: a system for linking and embedding data, images, and programs from different sources
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