Boo, Moo, Too, Droop, Scoop, Troop, Poor, Loose, Moon, Coop, Looney, Oreo, Boots, Hoot, Zoom, Loom, Loot,
The long o sound is found in words where the syllable containing the o ends in an e, such as telephone, atone and alone.
online, onshore, open, onetime, omen, omit, other, office
you have long words that sounds long o
spelling slow do it a long o sound
It is a long O sound, as in the rhyming words ghost and post. Other words use OA for the long O sound: boast, roast, and toast.
The O in cost has an AW sound (caret O), as in law and lost. The AW sound is also heard in O words such as off and long, and A words such as ball and call.
The o in to and do is neither a long o nor a short o. It's a long u. A long o sounds like the letter O, i.e in the word "glow". A short o is the sound in "hot".
open
Nose uses a long 'o'. It sounds the same as words like:bows (ribbon bows)chosecrowsgrowshosethrows
It has a long O and a silent E, as in the rhyming words bone and phone.
Yes. The island name Borneo ends with an "oh" sound, and open begins with an "oh" sound. This is a long O.
The O in stole is a long O (oh) and the E is silent. The long O sound usually comes from O words, OA words, OLL and OLD words, and some OW words. Examples are go, no, bone, tote, hole, toll, cold, loan, toad, float, and slow.
Both O sounds in hydrophone are the long O (oh) sound. The first instance is seen in the words pyromania, gyroscope, and cryogenic. The second instance in the words bone, stone, and alone. The long O appears in several spellings: - words with an O (go, comb, cold) - words with an O with a silent E (code, hole) - words with an OE (doe, foe) - words with OUGH (dough, though) - words with OW (flow, mow, row)
Yes. Both "for" and "roar" have a long O (the OA sounds like O in oar, boar, soar).
Yes. The sound is a long O, to rhyme with other -old words such as bold and cold.