Wit
Yes, it is okay and surprisingly oft used, as in this sentence: (or the one I just used :P)I love him so much.
From the King James versionMat 18:21 Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Till seven times?Mat 18:22 Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times: but, Until seventy times seven.
Do you mean ''What does the AUM Mantra mean?''
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
Often
Oft is not a shortened word. Often is a lengthened word. The original word is oft and the form often did not appear until about a century before Shakespeare's day. They are, of course, the same word and mean the same thing.
"What often makes you angry..."
It means "often". "Often" is actually a lengthened form of "oft"Oft is a poetic way of saying "often."Shakespeare's text is written in early modern English, not shakespeare talk. But I digress, oft means "often.""Oft" is the same word as "often". You will notice that words with -en at the end will sometimes have a form without the -en ending. Thus "hap" and "happen", "ope" and "open". Many of these appear to be adjectives formed from the past forms of words or from nouns, as "wooden" from "wood", "hempen" from "hemp", "shotten" from "shot".In the case of words like "often", the ending has survived after the reason for it has ceased to be.
Coughed Scoffed Oft Loft Microsoft
The sentence Wer oft Blick auf meine Fotos? is grammatically incorrect and makes little sense in German, It translates as Who often look/view my photos?If you want to Who often looks at my photos? then the correct form would be Wer schaut sich oft meine Fotos an?
oft
Aunt Louisa's Oft Told Tales was created in 187#.
It means basically that a family moving around, like a tree uprooted, will not thrive and grow so well as a settled family or a planted tree.
OFT
Oft in the Silly Night - 1929 was released on: USA: 8 June 1929
One example of a dictionary word ending in "oft" is "aloft," which means at or to a great height.