The OR is more accurately a caret O (long O + R) sound. It is not a short O.
The O in short is a type of long O sound, a caret O, that is paired with an R. In British English, the OR and AW sounds are pronounced the same.
Yes. It has one short O sound (aah) and one caret O sound (long O + R).
The O has a long O sound, but is a caret O due to the R sound (pronounced as AW in British English).
No, there are no short sounds.The A sound is a long A (ay) as in able. The O has a "caret O" sound (long O followed by R).
Short.
The OR is more accurately a caret O (long O + R) sound. It is not a short O.
No, there are no short sounds.The A sound is a long A (ay) as in able. The O has a "caret O" sound (long O followed by R).
The O in short is a type of long O sound, a caret O, that is paired with an R. In British English, the OR and AW sounds are pronounced the same.
Yes. It has one short O sound (aah) and one caret O sound (long O + R).
The O has a long O sound, but is a caret O due to the R sound (pronounced as AW in British English).
No, there are no short sounds.The A sound is a long A (ay) as in able. The O has a "caret O" sound (long O followed by R).
The O may be a short O, or a caret O (or) sound. In the US, this has a long O + R sound. The Y has a long E sound.
The O has a R-shaped long O sound (caret O) and the A is a long A.
No. The A has a caret O sound as in wore and form, which is a long O + R sound.
The long O "says its name" (oh) and the short O says "aah" as in stop. (There are R-shaped vowels considered neither long or short, but having long O sounds: the O in core and cord is a caret O or aw/or sound.)
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