My basic structure is [discussion about thing], and lo, [example of thing], kind of like Tv fool > over the air services > special topics > antennas low vhf antenna designs There's a cliche about circus clowns being creepy and dangerous, and lo, last night i saw a clown violating a teddy bear.
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According to the oed, in middle english there are two distinct words lo or loo which have fallen together
One of them is indeed derived from a form of look, but the other lรก, an exclamation indicating surprise, grief, or joy.
9 lo comes from middle english, where it was a short form of lok, imperative of loken, to look (see etymonline, wiktionary) To behold means to see, to look at and comes from old english bihaldan, give regard to, hold in view (compare to behalten in contemporary german). It expressly calls upon hearers to look at, to take account of, to behold what follows In contemporary english we say โlook!โ in pretty much exactly the same way.
When writing an instruction about connecting to a computer using ssh, telnet, etc., i'm not sure what spacing to use in this familiar spoken phrase Log in to host.com log into host.com login to But i found the structure unusual because lo+adjective itself serves as a noun, which is another grammar in spanish, but the adjective/adverb in the subordinate clause serve as a predicate/adverbial.