The usual vowel sound of the O in dog is an AW sound, which is written as a caret O, and is neither long nor short.
*There is a variant pronunciation with a short O, to rhyme with cog.
"Dog" has a short vowel sound, /ɒ/ in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).
In the word "bow," the "o" is a short vowel sound. It is pronounced as "b-ow" with a short "o" sound as in "hot" or "dog."
Yes, the word "on" has a short vowel sound. The "o" in "on" is pronounced as a short vowel, like the "o" in "hot" or "dog."
No, the word "stove" does not have a long vowel. In "stove," the "o" is pronounced with a short vowel sound as in "ah." Its pronunciation is /stoʊv/.
The words "mother" and "brother" have an "uh" sound that is typically sounded as a short U (compare to mutter).The words "mother" and "brother" have a short vowel sound. A long vowel sound carries the vowel as in "o" in loose or the "e" in femur. Short vowel sounds do not carry the sound of the vowel, as the "o" in foot or the "o" in dog. A good way of showing the difference is to take one word with a short vowel sound such as "bit" and listen to how the I sounds, then make a long vowel sound (eye rather than /ih/ ) and you'd pronounce the word as b-eye-t, which is bite.
No, the word "flag" contains a long vowel sound, as the "a" is pronounced like "ay" in this case. Short vowel words would include simple words like "cat" or "dog" where the vowel sounds are short and distinct.
The usual vowel sound of the O in dog is an AW sound, which is written as a caret O, and is neither long nor short. *There is a variant pronunciation with a short O, to rhyme with cog.
The words "mother" and "brother" have an "uh" sound that is typically sounded as a short U (compare to mutter).The words "mother" and "brother" have a short vowel sound. A long vowel sound carries the vowel as in "o" in loose or the "e" in femur. Short vowel sounds do not carry the sound of the vowel, as the "o" in foot or the "o" in dog. A good way of showing the difference is to take one word with a short vowel sound such as "bit" and listen to how the I sounds, then make a long vowel sound (eye rather than /ih/ ) and you'd pronounce the word as b-eye-t, which is bite.
No, the word "stove" does not have a long vowel. In "stove," the "o" is pronounced with a short vowel sound as in "ah." Its pronunciation is /stoʊv/.
The word 'dog' has a short o sound, as does hop or mop. The long o sound is formed when there is an e at the end of the word, as in hope or mope, or when the o is coupled with a w, e.g. slow.
the answer to that is that AnimAl has 2 vowels in it. a.
No. The O sound in dog is the AW/OR sound (caret O). This is the same sound heard in lawn and long, and in the rhyming words bog, log, and hog.
No. The pair OY (or OI) has a separate sound, different from long or short O.The long O sound (oh) is seen in the similar words coaster and toaster.
No, "wig" and "dog" do not rhyme. "Wig" has a short "i" sound, while "dog" has an "aw" sound.
The word "mop" has the short O (aah) sound as in several animal names.(There is a different sound, AW, in dog, hog, and frog.)The short O sound is heard as-- the O in fox, oxen, lobster, and wombat-- the first O in cockatoo, crocodile, rhinoceros-- the second O in hippopotamus-- the first A in wallaby
mop
An is used before all words beginning with a vowel sound. The word having the vowel sound may begin with a vowel or with a silent h as in an honor. Similarly, a word may start with a vowel, but not have a vowel sound.Examples :There is an elephant.He arrived in an ambulance.He is an honest man. (ahn sound)He attends a nearby university. (yoon sound)He saw a one-legged dog. (won sound)
long o