Observe, obliterate, obvious
The American Heritage Dictionary has over 3 1/2 pages of words that begin with "ob". You would get a much more comprehensive answer by looking for it, rather than asking for it.
"Obstacle" is a word that contains "ob." It refers to something that obstructs or hinders progress or achievement.
obnoxious, obfuscate, obliterate, obdurate, obsidian, obalisk
The word "oblong" has two syllables: ob-long.
In the word "object," the stress is on the first syllable, "ob-."
In the word "obstinate," the second syllable "sti" is the most strongly accented. The stress falls on the second syllable when pronouncing the word: ob-STI-nate.
The stressed syllable in the word "object" is the first syllable, pronounced as "OB-ject."
OB-ject - noun- He brought an ugly object to school. ob-JECT - verb - I object your honour!
The word "oblong" has two syllables: ob-long.
Obtain means to get or acquire. It begins with the letters ob.
if = falls if = wenn if = ob
ob
It is on the first syllable OB.
The word "obscure" means to hide or conceal something from sight. It comes from the Latin word "obscurus" which comes from "ob", which means toward, and the root "skeu", which is Indo-European for cover or conceal. So "ob" in "obscure" basically just means toward.
Homographs of the word "object" include: "Object" as a noun meaning a thing that can be seen and touched. "Object" as a verb meaning to express disagreement or disapproval. "Object" as a verb meaning to present a counterargument or obstacle.
There are two syllables in the word obliged. Ob-liged
The word is obscure.
Observe
Observe
b ob