The O in rose is a long O vowel sound, as in robe and hose.
The word "rose" has a long vowel sound.
S
No, the word "rose" does not have a long O vowel sound. The O in "rose" is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
The word "rose" has a long vowel sound. The 'o' in rose is pronounced like the 'o' in "so."
long
Rose has a short sound, pronounced as "rohz."
He loke i nā inoa `ē a`e inā honi ā onaona. Spoken as hě lō-kě ē nä ē-nō-wā (short break in the voice to separate the vowel before and after) ě(hold vowel sound for a little longer) ä-(short break)-ě ē-nä(hold sound) hō-nē ä(hold sound) ō-näō-nä. ě - short e sound as in "let", ō - long o sound as in "oh", i(ē) - long e sound as in "bee", ä - augmented a sound as in "all", näō - same sound as "now". Strangely, though the words are Hawaiian, the phrase is not but rather a direct translation of the English phrase.
The word "rose" has a long vowel sound. The 'o' in rose is pronounced like the 'o' in "so."
long
Rose has a short sound, pronounced as "rohz."
does rose have short or long o sound
No. A single e at the end of a word is always short.
No, the word "rose" does not have a long O vowel sound. The O in "rose" is pronounced as a short vowel sound.
No, "rows" and "clothes" do not rhyme as they have different vowel sounds. "Rows" sounds like "rose" with a long 'o' sound, while "clothes" sounds like "cloze" with a short 'o' sound.
Both the vowels in problem are short. The 'o' is short, as in cot, rather than long as in rose. The 'e' is short as in leg, rather than long as in gene.
He loke i nā inoa `ē a`e inā honi ā onaona. Spoken as hě lō-kě ē nä ē-nō-wā (short break in the voice to separate the vowel before and after) ě(hold vowel sound for a little longer) ä-(short break)-ě ē-nä(hold sound) hō-nē ä(hold sound) ō-näō-nä. ě - short e sound as in "let", ō - long o sound as in "oh", i(ē) - long e sound as in "bee", ä - augmented a sound as in "all", näō - same sound as "now". Strangely, though the words are Hawaiian, the phrase is not but rather a direct translation of the English phrase.
it takes about "i-don't-know-how-long" for a rose to become a rose.
The cast of Sound Proof with Leah Rose - 2008 includes: Maino
no