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o'clock
[ uh-klok ]
adverb
- of, by, or according to the clock (used in specifying the hour of the day):
It is now 4 o'clock.
- according to a method for indicating relative position whereby a plane in space is considered to be numbered as a clock's face, with 12 o'clock considered as directly ahead in horizontal position or straight up in vertical position.
o'clock
/ əˈ°ì±ôÉ’°ì /
adverb
- used after a number from one to twelve to indicate the hour of the day or night
- used after a number to indicate direction or position relative to the observer, twelve o'clock being directly ahead or overhead and other positions being obtained by comparisons with a clock face
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of o'clock1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of o'clock1
Example Sentences
"We have had children who have got themselves in a right state because they take their phones to their bedrooms and are sending messages at three o'clock in the morning," she said.
"Six o'clock Thursday night I had not heard anything then I got a text at 10pm," Burn added.
"It's nil-by-mouth from 12 o'clock the night before, so I went out for fish and chips - always God's food," he said.
It's two o'clock in the morning in Nairobi, and the TikTok Lives are in full flow.
She said bus services were "pretty reliable" and "there's a late bus down until about 11 o'clock home so I don't have any issue with it".
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