Yes, the word "bawl" has a short "o" sound. It is pronounced like "b-awl" with the emphasis on the first syllable.
It is not short or long. It is the caret O or (aw) sound. It has the same sound as bawl.
The pronunciation varies.It can have a short O (and the same sound as in moll or the first syllable of follow). Or it can have a caret O (aw) sound, to rhyme with bawl, fall, or ball.*the word dolly (cart) rhymes with jolly and has the short O sound
In US English, most -all words have a caret O or AW sound, to rhyme with haul and bawl. This is neither a short or long A sound. The short A is heard in gal and pal.
It has neither. Most words with -all have the AW sound, as in bawl and crawl.
It can, to rhyme with moll, as in dollar. But it can also have an AW sound, to rhyme with bawl, wall, and haul.(Some dictionaries list only the short O, but rhyming lists show it with fall. The related form "dolly" does seem to use only the OLL and not the AWL sound.)
It is not short or long. It is the caret O or (aw) sound. It has the same sound as bawl.
The pronunciation varies.It can have a short O (and the same sound as in moll or the first syllable of follow). Or it can have a caret O (aw) sound, to rhyme with bawl, fall, or ball.*the word dolly (cart) rhymes with jolly and has the short O sound
In US English, most -all words have a caret O or AW sound, to rhyme with haul and bawl. This is neither a short or long A sound. The short A is heard in gal and pal.
No. Some words spelled with -all have an AW/OR vowel sound (caret O), and rhyme with awl. Ball is a homophone of "bawl." * note that some words, such as ballast and ballet, do have a short A vowel sound.
It has neither. Most words with -all have the AW sound, as in bawl and crawl.
Not exactly. In US English, words with "all" mostly have the AW sound (ball = bawl) rather than the short sound (as in shall). This is called a caret O sound, and especially in British English has more of an O sound (as in hallowed). Some LL words with short A are alloy, allied, shall, fallow, gallows, and ballad.
It can, to rhyme with moll, as in dollar. But it can also have an AW sound, to rhyme with bawl, wall, and haul.(Some dictionaries list only the short O, but rhyming lists show it with fall. The related form "dolly" does seem to use only the OLL and not the AWL sound.)
The O in the word long may be a short vowel, but more usually an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words song, strong, and wrong. This AW sound is seen in words such as taught, sought, dawn, ball (bawl), and daughter.
The O in the word song may be a short vowel, but more usually an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words long, strong, and wrong. This AW sound is seen in words such as taught, sought, dawn, ball (bawl), and daughter.
No, the word "spot" has a long 'o' sound.
No, the word "from" does not have a short "o" sound. The "o" in "from" is pronounced as the diphthong /ɒʊ/.
In the word "robot," the vowel "o" makes a short vowel sound.