Try AWFUL or AWESOME
It has the AW (caret O) vowel sound, as in law and cost.
No. The AW is the "aw" diphthong sound as in draw and flaw.
I think aw sound gas a different vowel so it makes different sound.Aw sounds like *OR*
There are two sounds: the AU has the AW/OR (caret O) sound, and an unstressed or schwa sound for the other U (aw-tum).
Only one. But the AU vowel pair may be pronounced as a short A (ant) or as an AW sound (umlaut A).
No, the word "claw" has a long "aw" sound, not a short "o" sound.
There is a short I, but the A has either an umlaut A (ar) sound or an AW sound.
No, it usually has the AW sound, related to the long OR sound, as in gong and wrong. * In US English, the -ong words have the AW sound (as in bong) rather than the O sound (as in bongo).
Yes, "lord" and "word" do not rhyme. "Lord" is pronounced with an "aw" sound, while "word" is pronounced with an "ur" sound.
No. The AU has an AW sound (caret O). The E is silent. (kawz)
The AW is a caret O vowel sound (or/aw) as in draw, ought, caught, and taut. (In British English, OR often has the same sound as AW because there is no R sound. So the words caught and court sound the same, as do lore and law.)
It has neither. Most words with -all have the AW sound, as in bawl and crawl.