Yes. The O in job has a short O sound, as in rob and snob.
(The Biblical name Job is pronounced as a long O, as in Joe.)
Yes. Both words have a short O (aah) sound also heard in nod, shot, jot, and chop.
The word donkey has two pronunciations, one with a "dunk" sound and one with a "donk" sound.The dunk version rhymes with monkey and has the short U vowel sound, as in the words but, hut, done, ton, sun, and bus.The donk version rhymes with honky and wonky, and has a short O sound, as in the words con, bond, job, and stop.
Yes. However, the name Job has a long o sound.
read,live,Job
The short O sound is seen in O words such as body, bomb, bond, robot cot, con, cop, cot, clot, chop dot, follow, gob, god, agog, got hop, hot, job, jot, knock, knot, lob, lot, mob, not, pod, plod, pop, pot, plot, sob, tot, top, and stop. Some A words also have the short O sound : what, wad, wan, want
Yes, the word "pole" has a short o sound in standard English pronunciation. It is similar to the o sound found in words like "hot" or "job."
job,part time,its also a hobby
Well if you know English you would know that A and I are vowel.. good job stupid well done
its the shoes on the breaks mine was doing the same quiet an exspensive job too
It is the same name for a paymaster and has the same job.
A live sound technician and live sound engineer are essentially the same job. "Engineer" has a connotation of someone that is more experienced/has more training than a technician. That being said, there is no committee that designates titles in the audio entertainment industry, such as those in the medicine field where each title specifies a certain level of education/skill.
Job site is two words.