Auric aureole aura aural august autumn audacious augment
One example of a long "a" word spelled with "au" is "faucet."
chalk, talk, walk, stalk, balk
The word include laugh, laughter, and one pronunciation each of aunt and draught (ant, draft). There are many more words that have an AW sound, which is a caret O.
Very few words can be spelled with the letters lunch. Hun is one of the words that can be spelled with those letters.
The OU in mouse has the AW sound (caret O), as in house and sprout. This is widely spelled as AU or AW. In US English, many words ending in -ong have an -awng sound. Some words with OR are pronounced the same in British English. Some words with this vowel sound are: AW words - claw, brawl, lawn, awed AU words - caught, taught, taut OA words - broad O words - on, long, song, moll, john A words - ball, fall
adequately
Words that can be spelled using letters from "marmalade" are:AlarmedArmadaMadameMeddlerRammedAlarmArmedDreamMedalRealmAreaDealDearDramLameLardLearMadeMareMealReadRealArmEarElmLadMadMedRamRed
There are words from French spelled with an AY, such as bayou and cayenne.
Some words with 'au' in them are maul, caul, cauliflower, caterwaul, aubergine, caught, taught, flautist...
Some words that contain "aw" are: dawn, draw, saw. Some words that contain "au" are: author, fault, haunt.
A phonetically spelled word is when you spell it the way it sounds. For example, "through" would be "thru". A correctly spelled word is when it is spelled as it is found in the dictionary.
No they are not spelled with an apostrophe.