The 'a' sound in bacon is a short vowel sound.
Short
The word "guitar" has a long vowel sound for the letter "i."
The vowel sound in "shot" is the "ɑ" sound, represented by the phonetic symbol /ɑ/.
The word "closet" has a short vowel sound. The "o" is pronounced as a short vowel similar to the "ah" sound in "hot."
The short vowel sound in "shot" is the "o" sound, as in "ah."
Mustard contains a short vowel sound since the "u" in mustard is pronounced as /ʌ/, the short "u" sound.
The word "closet" has a short vowel sound. The "o" is pronounced as a short vowel similar to the "ah" sound in "hot."
Mustard contains a short vowel sound since the "u" in mustard is pronounced as /ʌ/, the short "u" sound.
The short vowel sound in "shot" is the "o" sound, as in "ah."
The vowel sound in "shot" is the "ɑ" sound, represented by the phonetic symbol /ɑ/.
Yes. Both words have a short O (aah) sound also heard in nod, shot, jot, and chop.
The short "o" vowel sound is pronounced as /ɑ/ in American English. It is heard in words like "hot," "top," and "frog." It is a quick and crisp sound, often found in closed syllables.
The i in city is a short vowel.
Sight by a long shot
Overlapping sound (a.k.a. sound bridge).
No. It is In-dee-yann . Some people mispronounce it as In-Jun, with the short u sound, but that is just lazy enunciation.The dy- sound in English is often palatalized to dj- in informal and dialectical speech, for example didja and woodja for did you and would you. It is not lazy. That said, the uh vowel produced by palatalizing Indian to Injun is not a shot u sound ( as in book ) but a schwa.
Ouch!
Do you mean "How fast does the sound of a pistol being shot travels?" because technically, a sound cannot be shot. But all sound travels at the same speed. If I were to just yell at the top of my lungs, the sound I make would travel to someone's ears just as fast as if I shot a gun and someone heard it. All sound travels 340 miles a second, or 122,400 MPH (miles per hour). So the answer would be "122,400 MPH"