It is a short vowel because it doesn't "say" the letter name.
The "O" in "hop" has a short O vowel sound. If it were to be a long vowel it would sound like "hope".
The word "hop" has a short vowel sound.
The word "hop" has a short o vowel sound.
The letter O in top has a short O vowel sound, as in hop and mop.
Yes, the "o" in "hopped" has a short vowel sound pronounced as /ɒ/.
It depends on the specific word you are referring to. Long vowels are pronounced with a steady vocal sound and are usually the same as the letter form (e.g., "cake," "spoon"). Short vowels are pronounced with a quick, clipped sound (e.g., "cat," "hop").
In some English words, the silent "e" at the end changes the sound of the preceding vowel from a short sound to a long sound. For example, in the word "hop," the silent "e" changes the "o" from a short o sound to a long o sound in "hope."
The word "hop" has a short o vowel sound.
The letter O in top has a short O vowel sound, as in hop and mop.
Yes, the "o" in "hopped" has a short vowel sound pronounced as /ɒ/.
It depends on the specific word you are referring to. Long vowels are pronounced with a steady vocal sound and are usually the same as the letter form (e.g., "cake," "spoon"). Short vowels are pronounced with a quick, clipped sound (e.g., "cat," "hop").
To make a short vowel word into a long vowel word, you usually add a silent "e" at the end of the word. This "magic e" changes the vowel sound from short to long. For example, "kit" becomes "kite" and "hop" becomes "hope."
The only verb forms with a single consonant and a short vowel seem to be "am" and "is." (are has an umlaut A sound).Other one-consonant verbs such as aid, aim, be, buy, die, do, ease, eat, eke, eye, go, hoe, obey, oil, owe, pay, queue, rue, see, sue, and tie have long vowel sounds.
No, it has a short O sound (ah). It rhymes with cop, hop, and stop.
Yes. The O has a short O sound as in hop and hot.
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 letter O can produce various vowel sounds, such as the long o sound (as in "go"), the short o sound (as in "dog"), and the diphthong /oʊ/ sound (as in "boat"). It can also produce the schwa sound /ə/ in some unstressed syllables.
NOTE: Vowel sounds can be made by the particular vowel (a,e,i,o,u) or by other vowels. So referring to a "long A" should refer to any word with the "ay" sound, not just A words. Words with short vowel sounds: Short A : apple, acrobat, avenue, bat, fast, had, laugh Short E: end, elephant, egg, bed, fell, let Short I: igloo, in, bit, fin, hill, pink Short O: dot, mop, rock, sob, Short U: up, umbrella, cup, fun, gust, gum, number, puff, summer Short OO : book, good, foot (see related questions)
It specifies whether the word has a short or long vowel sound. Take "hop" and "hope:" If you didn't double the P in "hop" when adding ed, they would look exactly the same, "hoped." But if you double the P before adding the suffix, you can clearly see that the word is "hopped."