A back vowel is a vowel sound produced in the back of the mouth, for example the "u" in "rule" and the "o" in "pole".
A back vowel is a type of vowel sound that is produced with the back of the tongue positioned towards the back of the mouth. Examples of back vowels include "oo" as in "boot" and "aw" as in "caught." These vowels are typically characterized by a lower position of the tongue compared to front vowels.
Back has a short vowel sound for the 'a' in back. It is pronounced as /æ/.
The vowel sound in "nose" is the open-mid back unrounded vowel, represented by the symbol /o/. It is a rounded vowel produced with the tongue placed in the back of the mouth.
The word that means the opposite of front and has a short vowel sound is "back."
stamp
The vowel sound in "wash" is the /ɑ/ sound, also known as the open back unrounded vowel.
The word "back" has a short A vowel sound.
The A has a short A vowel sound as in bat and pack.
Back has a short vowel sound for the 'a' in back. It is pronounced as /æ/.
Crack has a short vowel sound, represented by the 'a' letter, as in the word "cat."
The word that means the opposite of front and has a short vowel sound is "back."
Short!
In RP, the o in coffee is a short open back vowel /ˈkɒf.i/ , whereas in General American speech one often hears either a long open back vowel /ˈkɑ.fi/ or a long mid back vowel /ˈkɔ.fi/ Wiktionary offers two audio fragments that illustrate this difference
Vowels can be classified based on the position of the tongue in the mouth. The three main positions are front vowels (tongue towards the front of the mouth, like /i/ in "see"), central vowels (tongue in the middle, like /ə/ in "sofa"), and back vowels (tongue towards the back, like /u/ in "blue").
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in bat or crack.
No, the "a" in black is a short vowel sound, pronounced as /æ/. A long vowel sound in English would be pronounced with an extended sound, such as the "a" in "cake" pronounced as /eɪ/.
Yes. The A has a short A sound as in jab and back.
Yes, "sack" is a short vowel word. The 'a' in "sack" is pronounced as a short vowel sound, as in cat or bat.