Roosevelt
Not a single word, that I can think of, has double o's that sound like a single o.
Some examples include "look," "book," "good," and "foot."
In Australian dialect, the double "o" sound in "look" is often pronounced as a longer "oo" sound, similar to the "oo" in "book" or "took."
A long "o" sound is pronounced like the "o" in words like "go" or "home." It is a vowel sound that is held out longer than a short "o" sound, such as in words like "hot" or "not."
No, "oppose" has a long "o" sound, pronounced as /oʊ/. The short "o" sound is typically found in words like "hot" or "top."
Yes, both "roar" and "for" have a long O vowel sound. The letter "o" in these words is pronounced as /ɔː/, which is a long O sound.
Pottu is pronounced as "po-too." The 'o' is pronounced like the 'o' in the word 'hot' and the 'u' sound is like in the word 'too.' The 'tt' is pronounced as a double 't' sound.
No. Words with a double L have an AW sound (caret O) for the A, so that all is a homophone for "awl." The short A sound is heard in words such as pal and gallon.
Words with the long O sound include:brokecopecloakcroakdoughdoegrowgroanphonepokepoleshowsnowsoulsmokestroketoesvotewovenyoke
O sound words : door, floor, and in some dialects poor(US homophone is pour, not pore).
there is a double 'o' in the word moon. say, spoon has double 'o's therefore making the long o sound.
No, it is a "long OO" sound (double O as in moon).Some words with O, U, OU are pronounced with OO : to, dune, souvenir
The words lose, prove, and move (and words based on them) have the long OO sound.
The letter A can sound like 'o' when it follows a W. Here are some examples:quadruplesquashswallowswampswanswarmswashwandwantwanderwarmwarthogwashwatchwaterwhat
The letter "o" in the word "some" makes the "uh" sound due to its placement in the word and the influence of the surrounding letters. The "e" at the end of the word is silent, so the "o" is pronounced with a short "u" sound.
The word "come" has a short o sound. It rhymes with words like "some" and "drum."
spelling slow do it a long o sound
No, the O in out (of outside) is part of the diphthong OU which is an OW sound and not the same as the short O. Words like "dot" and "got" have a short O sound. The OU/OW sound in "outside" is the same as the vowel sound in "sound", "doubt", "down", "foul", and "how".
The normal sound of the OA pair is a long O as in loan and coal. It has a caret O (or) sound in R words such as board and soar (long O +R). In the word boa, it has the two separate sounds, a long O and a schwa (boh-uh).