Only if you live in the USA : dawg , the rest of the english speaking world says dog ,like fog og not aw -aw is more like or like raw and for ,practice dog - log and fog .Americans draw out the o so it sounds like aw -is just the accent and changes between states and even cities in USA
No, "wig" and "dog" do not rhyme. "Wig" has a short "i" sound, while "dog" has an "aw" sound.
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.
The O in the word fog has an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words dog, frog, log, and bog. This AW sound is seen in words such as flaw, straw, taught, sought, dawn, long, song, ball (bawl), haul, and daughter.
watch, swat, wash, wand, wasp, swap
The AW is a caret O vowel sound (or/aw) as in draw, ought, caught, and taut. (In British English, OR often has the same sound as AW because there is no R sound. So the words caught and court sound the same, as do lore and law.)
Neither. The OU pair has the caret O (or/aw) sound, which is similar to the long OR sound. It rhymes with taut and caught. This is the same aw sound as in crawl and ball.
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.
No, "lawn" and "ball" do not have the same sound. "Lawn" has an "aw" vowel sound, while "ball" has an "a" vowel sound. The differing vowel sounds make the words phonetically 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.
It has the AW (caret O) vowel sound, as in law and cost.
There are two sounds: the AU has the AW/OR (caret O) sound, and an unstressed or schwa sound for the other U (aw-tum).
Yes, a donkey does make a sound that sound similar to the letters 'ee aw'. It can sometimes sound like 'hee haw' as well.