See also: ohso

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From oh! (interjection) +‎ so (adverb).

Pronunciation

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Adverb

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oh so (not comparable)

  1. very, extremely (often ironic)
    • 1971 July–August, Capt. Jacque Cestlabote, “Restrain Sloan Wilson!”, in Boating, →ISSN, page 8:
      His oh-so-witty (ugh) remarks on the loud hailer constitute one more proof that this instrument has minimal value on a pleasure boat.
    • 1997, Hugh Aaron, Letters from the Good War: A Young Man's Discovery of the World, Stones Point Press, →ISBN, page 314:
      He is, reputedly, a dashing Casanova and receives oh so many letters from oh so many femmes.
    • 2011, Scott Granneman, Mac OS X Snow Leopard for Power Users: Advanced Capabilities and Techniques, Apress, →ISBN, page 51:
      [] it’s truly incredible how similar the Finder’s behaviors are today to that oh-so-crude yet oh-so-amazing Finder of 1984

Translations

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