A word that rhymes with "thou," "ow," and "st" is "plowest," as in the superlative form of the verb "plow."
rhymes with oust. F ow st
It is pronounced like "THOW."
No, "go" and "thou" do not rhyme. "Go" is pronounced with a long "o" sound while "thou" is pronounced with a short "ou" sound.
"Short." The "o" in the word "cow" is a short vowel sound, as in the word "hot."
Yes, they are end rhymes of each other.
Yes. There is a long O (oh). Some OW words have an OU / OW sound, rather than (oh). Low rhymes with crow and show.
Ow'st is short for ow(ne)st, so it means you possess or you have.The line "nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st" in Shakespeare's sonnet XVIII could be rewritten as "nor will you lose the beauty that you possess".
No. The OU pair has an OW sound, not an (oh). It rhymes with count and fount.
Yes. There is a long O (oh). Some OW words have an OU / OW sound, rather than (oh). Low rhymes with crow and show.
The word "plow" is pronounced as "plow" (rhymes with "cow").
If it rhymes with Ghost, it can't start with a g; otherwise, its the same word: GHOST. Goest - an archaic form of the verb go - used with the pronoun "thou" - I go, you go, thou goest, he goes
The letter combination "ow" makes two different sounds. The "ow" as in cow sound is contained in these words that rhyme: cow, sow, bow (as in the bow of a boat), thou, plow. The "ow" as in crow sound is contained in these words that rhyme: row, blow, show, mow, tow, crow, throw, flow.