Because of the many immigrants from foreign countries in America.
No. It has a diphthong AW sound as in law and lawn. It combines two different vowel sounds and is used for the OR sound in British English.
Only the actual sound of the accent and a few different words. I have many Aussie and Kiwi friends and have no problem at all conversing with them.
The O could be a long vowel, but as OR is a special vowel sound because of its different pronunciation in US English (or) and British English (aw). Neither of the A's has a long sound.
The "a" in "washing" is pronounced like the short vowel sound /ɒ/ in British English or /ɑː/ in American English. It is a relaxed sound, similar to the "a" in "father" in American pronunciation. In phonetic terms, it is typically represented as /wɔːʃɪŋ/ in American English and /wɒʃɪŋ/ in British English.
if it only sound english
The vowel sound in "fox" is a short o sound. It is pronounced /ɒ/ in British English and /ɑ/ in American English.
The vowel sound is an "or" which is a long O in US English and a caret O (aw) in British English.
It is a long A (ay) sound, but more specifically a caret A (ayr).
No. The E is silent, but the -ar makes a different sound from either the long or short A sound. It is closer to a short O sound. The word large in British English sounds like "lodge" in US English.
It still does in some pronunciations (British English). It lost the long E sound in US English and adopted the short I sound of "bin."
It is a type of long O (caret O) that has an OR sound in US English and an AW sound in British English.
No. The AU has an "aw" sound as in caught and awful, called a caret O. In British English this is the normal sound of "or."