Why people says tho at the end of the sentence? [duplicate] tho(ugh) When though is the last word in the sentence, it is a marker that the speaker has just added and may be adding some new information which qualifies or limits what he said a second ago, so the listener does not get the wrong idea He knows how to fix cars He has no formal training, though He learned by watching YouTube videos
Is thru for through acceptable? Tho for though? "Thru" is correct (however very informal, not a very good idea, and only used when space is at a real premium — e g road signs, technical drawings) English, but -u is not a shortened way of -ough except in words that derivate from through (e g breakthrough)
People please tell me what does tho mean! [closed] Tho is an alternate spelling of "though," often used when people want to type is few letters as possible It is naturally popular on twitter, where you have count your characters, but it's actually been around in English for well over 100 years
Can I use tho though just like when I use because or but? If tho means though = although = however, I don't think that makes sense Or perhaps, have I been misunderstood by its real meaning regardlss it's used in formal or non-formal situation? I'm always thinking that the word tho used in those sentences don't have meaning and just the way people who want to sound like American have cool English
slang - If someone says That hair tho, does it have a positive or a . . . It depends heavily on context; however this is a common slang expression "That ___ tho" which is used to draw attention toward something which may or may not even have a "good or bad meaning" For example, These are pointing out "that hair tho" surrounded by context which provides a positive outlook: