What is the difference between - and homo?
- | homo |
(colloquial, often, pejorative) Short form of homosexual.
* {{quote-book
, year=1938
, author=Cecil Day Lewis
, title=Starting point
, page=127
"My dear Theo, at my age one can't worry about little details like that. Besides, he's got such a nice voice."}} (uncountable, dated, US, Canada) Homogenized milk with a high butterfat content.
* {{quote-book
, year=1956
, author=Purdue University. Agricultural Experiment Station.
, title=Station bulletin
, page=25
(colloquial, sometimes, pejorative) Of or pertaining to homosexuality.
(not comparable, Canada, US) Homogenized; almost always said of milk with a high butterfat content.
* {{quote-magazine
, year=1958
, magazine=American milk review and milk plant monthly
, volume=20
, page=190
As a symbol -
is [[‐]] (hyphen).As a noun homo is
{{context|colloquial|often|pejorative|lang=en}} short form of homosexual.As a adjective homo is
{{context|colloquial|sometimes|pejorative|lang=en}} of or pertaining to homosexuality.-
Not English
- has no English definition. It may be misspelled.homo
English
Noun
citation, isbn= , passage="... He's a homo ."
"My dear Theo, at my age one can't worry about little details like that. Besides, he's got such a nice voice."}}
- I heard that she's a homo , but she hasn't come out of the closet yet.
citation, passage=One quart of homo wholesale in glass equals one quart equivalent. Certain modifications were made in these relatives to adjust for variations in units per ... }}
Adjective
(en adjective)citation, passage=Regular homo' milk was being sold out of stores in half gallons for 33 cents against 44 cents on regular ' homo milk on home delivery. }}