出典:Wiktionary
From the Ancient Greek -οι (-oi), the second-declension masculine nominative plural case ending — the plural form of -ος (-os); compare the equivalents of the Latin second declension (-us → -ī), with which the Grecian case endings are usually substituted in English words, especially in the plural.
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2010/09/01 17:07 UTC 版)
O-I was the name given to a proposed series of Japanese super-heavy tanks, to be used in the Pacific Theater. The vehicle was monstrous, carrying 11 crew in its 120-ton body, but only one model was rumored to have been built in 1944 and afterward sent to Manchuria. Exact information is lacking however, and it is unknown whether it ever saw combat. Whereas the original plans called for three turrets for the one large cannon and two smaller guns, a more advanced experimental prototype, the Ultra-Heavy Tank OI featured no fewer than four turrets. It is unlikely that the Ultra-Heavy was ever actually built.
オオハシカッコウ
toucans
オオアリ
ハジロオオシギ
that man
to speak with a provincial accent
むら
a village
ウアカリ類
uakaris
puffbirds
かま
a silkworm
がってんだ
Okey-dokes