No. The OA in boat has a long O sound, while the O in song is a short O.
The terms "long" and "short" do not properly describe English vowels. The vowel in song is the same as the vowel in lawn - neither long nor short.
The word "fool" has the same vowel sound as "mule." The phrase "we dance to this" suggests that the answer may be a song or music.
"song" has the "short O" sound, and is pronounced [sɑŋ] or [sɔŋ]. Both vowels are commonly called a "short O" in English.
The O in the word song may be a short vowel, but more usually an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words long, strong, and wrong. This AW sound is seen in words such as taught, sought, dawn, ball (bawl), and daughter.
The "ea" in "meat" is a long vowel sound. It says its own name, like in the alphabet letter "e."
No. It has a short I sound as in sin and kin. If it was a long I, it would sound like sky with an N.
The letter "o" in "song" is a short vowel sound. It is a short "o" as in "hot" rather than a long "o" as in "stone."
The word "song" can have a short O sound (sounds like the bong in bongo drum), but more usually a caret O (aw) sound, to rhyme with long and wrong.
No, "bones" is not a long vowel word. The vowel sound in "bones" is pronounced as a short vowel /ɒ/.
The O in the word fog has an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words dog, frog, log, and bog. This AW sound is seen in words such as flaw, straw, taught, sought, dawn, long, song, ball (bawl), haul, and daughter.
The O in the word long may be a short vowel, but more usually an AW sound (caret O) as seen in the rhyming words song, strong, and wrong. This AW sound is seen in words such as taught, sought, dawn, ball (bawl), and daughter.
Words that have the same internal vowel sounds are said to rhyme. Rhyming words are commonly used in poetry, song lyrics, and children's books to create a pleasing and rhythmic sound pattern. Rhymes can help with memorization and add emphasis to certain words or phrases.