Yes, "lock" is pronounced with a short o sound.
Yes, "lock" has a short vowel sound. The "o" in lock has a short "o" sound, pronounced as /ɒ/.
No, the word "lock" does not have the short O sound. It has the short OI sound.
Yes. The O has a short O sound as in clot and lock.
The "o" in lock typically has a short vowel sound. It is pronounced like "a" in "clock" and "rock."
Yes, the O in lock is a short vowel. In words with a single vowel, and words ending in "ck," the vowel is almost always short.
Yes, "lock" has a short vowel sound. The "o" in lock has a short "o" sound, pronounced as /ɒ/.
No, the word "lock" does not have the short O sound. It has the short OI sound.
Yes. The O has a short O sound as in clot and lock.
The O has a short O vowel sound, as in lock and rob.
The "o" in lock typically has a short vowel sound. It is pronounced like "a" in "clock" and "rock."
No, the word "rock" does not have a long vowel sound. Its vowel sound is short.
Lock has a short O sound (ah). It rhymes with block, clock, and stock.
Yes, "lock" is a short vowel word because the "o" in "lock" is pronounced with a short vowel sound, making it a one-syllable word with a short vowel.
No, "sock" has a short "o" sound. It rhymes with dock, flock, knock, lock, mock, and rock.The word "soak" has a long "o" sound. It rhymes with broke, cloak, joke, poke, stroke, and woke.
The noun project has a short O sound (as opposed to the long O of the verb). Words with a similar "oj" (odg) sound are dodge and progeny. Words with a short O sound include rob, body, lock, shot, and flop.
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/.