What is the meaning of ô?

Transliterates Indic (or equivalent).

A dictionary transcription for the THOUGHT vowel; also an orthographic ⟨o⟩ with a diacritic that marks it as having that value, as in the word "nor".

Obsolete spelling of O.

Gheg form of është, third-person singular present indicative of jam

O (vocative)

with

The twenty-seventh letter of the Jarai alphabet, written in the Latin script.

he, she, it

denotes object of discussion or thought; about (concerning) [+locative]

telling the time; at [+locative]

denotes object of a request, question, or actions; about, for [+accusative]

denotes object of care; about, for [+accusative]

denotes object of physical reaction or action; on, against [+accusative] or [+locative]

denotes a possessed trait; of [+locative]

denotes object of dispute, claim, bet; for; about [+accusative]

denotes object that is the cause of accusation or some action; for [+accusative]

denotes a difference; by [+accusative]

denotes the circumstances of a given activity or the means enabling it to be performed [+locative]

denotes object immediately neighboring another; by [+locative]

head

The twenty-third letter of the Kashubian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

ó

oh!

(Contraction of a 'o.) in (temporal preposition)

to the (specification of quantity)

hey (used to draw someone’s attention)

The name of the Latin-script letter Ô.

Contraction of a u (to the).

The twenty-second letter of the Silesian alphabet, written in the Latin script.

This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.

The name of the Latin-script letter Ô/ô.

The name of the Latin-script letter O/o.

black

umbrella (cloth-covered frame used for protection against rain or sun)

a cell

a blank (space to be filled in on a form or template)

A letter of the Walloon alphabet, written in the Latin script..

The letter O, marked for its long stressed pronunciation, either in a monosyllabic word or in the final syllable of a polysyllabic word.

Source: wiktionary.org