Io most commonly refers to:

  • Io (moon), a moon of Jupiter
  • Io (mythology), daughter of Inachus in Greek mythology, and lover of Zeus who was turned into a cow

Io, IO, iO, I/O, i/o, or i.o. may also refer to:

Arts and media edit

Fictional elements edit

Gaming edit

Music edit

Theatre and opera edit

  • Io (opera), an unfinished acte de ballet (opera) by Jean-Philippe Rameau
  • iO Theater (ImprovOlympic), a theater in Chicago, Illinois, dedicated to improvisational comedy
  • IO West, a Los Angeles theater associated with the Chicago iO

Other uses in arts and media edit

Business and economics edit

Language edit

  • i.o., in illo ordine, Latin phrase meaning "respectively" ("in that order")
  • Io (princely title), a particle of a title used by Moldavian and Wallachian Princes-regnant
  • Ido language (ISO 639-1 language code IO), a constructed language
  • Indirect object, the object that is the recipient of an action (by a verb)
  • Yo, also referred to as Io

Mythology edit

  • Io (mythology), daughter of Inachus in Greek mythology, and lover of Zeus who was turned into a cow
  • Io, an alternate spelling of the nereid Ino, later known as Leukothea, who in the Odyssey gave Odysseus a veil that allowed him to breathe underwater
  • Io Matua Kore, in some Māori traditions the supreme god

People edit

  • Io Murota (室田 伊緒, born 1989), Japanese shogi player
  • Io Sakisaka (咲坂 伊緒), Japanese manga artist
  • Io Shirai (born 1990), Japanese professional wrestler
  • Iou Kuroda (黒田 硫黄, born 1971), Japanese manga artist
  • iO Tillett Wright (born 1985), American artist, director, photographer, writer, film maker, activist, and actor

Places on Earth edit

Science and technology edit

Astronomy edit

Biology and medicine edit

Computing edit

  • .io, the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for the British Indian Ocean Territory
  • Io (programming language), a pure object-oriented programming language
  • IO.SYS, a system file in Microsoft DOS and Windows 95, 98 and ME
  • Indistinguishability obfuscation, a cryptographic tool to obscure computer code
  • Input/output, the collection of interfaces that different functional units of an information processing system use to communicate with each other

Other uses in science and technology edit

Other uses edit

See also edit