Yes. The O in cone has a long O sound (oh) and the E is silent.
Yes, the word "cone" has a long o vowel sound, which is pronounced like the letter 'o' in the alphabet.
The long vowel sound in "clothes" is the "o" sound, as in "coat" or "cone."
No. It has the OU/OW sound as in cow and how. This is neither long or short.
No, "bones" is not a long vowel word. The vowel sound in "bones" is pronounced as a short vowel /ɒ/.
The O has a long O vowel sound as in foe and cold.
The word "open" has the vowel sound /oʊ/ (as in the word "cone").
The long vowel sound in "clothes" is the "o" sound, as in "coat" or "cone."
No. It has the OU/OW sound as in cow and how. This is neither long or short.
No, "bones" is not a long vowel word. The vowel sound in "bones" is pronounced as a short vowel /ɒ/.
The O has a long O vowel sound as in foe and cold.
The word "open" has the vowel sound /oʊ/ (as in the word "cone").
The O has a long O sound, as in tow and cold.
No, the word "hoping" does not have a long vowel sound. The "o" in "hoping" has a short vowel sound as in "hot."
No, the word "rose" does not have a long O vowel sound. The O in "rose" is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
The O is a Long vowel. Short vowel O's tend to sound like "aah." Long vowel O's tend to just have the "oh" sound. The Y also has a long E vowel sound. (coh-zee)
The O has a long O vowel sound, and the U is a schwa (unstressed short sound).
The word "no" has a short vowel sound. The 'o' in "no" is pronounced as a short /o/ sound.
The "o" in "poke" has a long vowel sound.