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córso, "course"/"run", the past participle of "correre". It can also be used on the nonfinal vowels o and e to indicate that the vowel is stressed and that it is open: còrso, "Corsican", vs. In Italian, the grave accent is used over any vowel to indicate word-final stress: Niccolò (equivalent of Nicholas and the forename of Machiavelli). In Chinese pinyin, ò is the yángqù tone (阳去, falling tone) of "o". In the Vietnamese alphabet, ò is the huyền tone (falling tone) of "o". Ò is the 28th letter of the Kashubian alphabet and represents /wɛ/.
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It is used in Catalan, Emilian-Romagnol, Lombard, Papiamento, Occitan, Kashubian, Sardinian, Scottish Gaelic, Taos, Vietnamese, Haitian Creole, Norwegian, Welsh and Italian. Ò, ò ( o- grave) is a letter of the Latin script.
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