clo

See also: CLO, Clo, cló, clò, and cło

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈt͡slo]

Noun

clo n

  1. duty, tariff, customs duty (on export and import)

Derived terms

See also


Vietnamese

Chemical element
Cl Previous: lưu huỳnh (S)
Next: agon (Ar)

Etymology

From French chlore, from Ancient Greek χλωρός (khlōrós).

Pronunciation

  • (Hà Nội) IPA(key): [klɔ˧˧], [kəː˨˩ lɔ˧˧]
  • (Huế) IPA(key): [klɔ˧˧], [kəː˦˩ lɔ˧˧]
  • (Hồ Chí Minh City) IPA(key): [klɔ˧˧], [kəː˨˩ lɔ˧˧]
  • Phonetic: clo, cờ lo

Noun

clo

  1. chlorine

Welsh

Etymology

From Proto-Brythonic *klọw, from Proto-Celtic *klāwos, possibly from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kleh₂w- (hook, crook, peg) (whence Latin clāvis).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kloː/

Noun

clo m (plural cloeon or cloeau)

  1. lock, bolt
  2. impediment, difficulty
  3. (prosody) consonance or correspondence of consonants in cynghanedd; often figurative
  4. lock, brake; mechanism that explodes charge in gun
  5. canal lock
  6. cluster, bunch
  7. (rugby) lock
  8. conclusion

Derived terms

  • ar glo (locked)
  • clo adlam (spring lock)
  • clo araith (peroration)
  • clo bach (appliance to keep the wheel of a vehicle from turning on a steep slope, literally little lock)
  • clo clap, clo clec, clo clwt, clo cramp, clo dibyn, clo llyffant, clo march (padlock)
  • clo clicied (clicket-lock, latch-lock)
  • clo cont (chastity belt, girdle)
  • clo cyngan (correspondence of two consonants or groups of consonants in cynghanedd; conclusion, close)
  • clo cywydd (envoy, concluding couplet)
  • clo dryll (lock of a gun)
  • clo egwyd (padlock, fetterlock)
  • clo(’r) chwedl
  • clo rheswm (conclusion)
  • clo Sbaen (Spanish padlock, chastity belt, girdle)
  • clo tân (firelock)
  • clo trafod (closure)
  • tan glo (locked, locked up, under lock and key)
  • tan glo ac allwydd (under lock and key)
  • ynghlo, yng nghlo (locked, locked up)
  • cloi (to lock, shut or bind fast, clinch; to conclude)

Mutation

Welsh mutation
radicalsoftnasalaspirate
clo glo nghlo chlo
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

References

  • Angharad Fychan and Ann Parry Owen, editors (2014), clo”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies
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