Yes. The O in rope has a long O (oh) sound and the E is silent.
No. It is a long O (and a silent E). You can hear the (oh) sound.
The O in rope is a long O, and there is a silent E.
Flexible rope
C diphth can refer to "c diphthong," which is a linguistic term describing a complex vowel sound that begins with one vowel sound and glides into another within the same syllable. In phonetics, diphthongs are characterized by a smooth transition between two vowel qualities. An example in English is the sound in the word "coin," where the vowel transitions from "o" to "i." If you meant something else, please provide more context.
Some of them are long and some are short.
The word "rope" has a long vowel sound in the letter "o."
The word "rope" has a long vowel sound, pronounced as /roʊp/.
Yes, the "o" in rope makes a long vowel sound, not a short one.
No, the word "rope" has a long vowel sound for the letter "o", as in "ro-puh".
Yes, The OA vowel pair in soap has a long O (oh) sound, to rhyme with rope.
Yes, The OA vowel pair in soap has a long O (oh) sound, to rhyme with rope.
No. It is a long O (and a silent E). You can hear the (oh) sound.
The word "soap" has the same long O (oh) sound as rope.
No. The OA vowel pair in soap has a long O sound, as in soak or rope.
The O in rope is a long O, and there is a silent E.
The OA pair in soap has a long O vowel sound, as in coal or loan, to rhyme with hope and rope.
No. The O has a long O (oh) sound as in post and pose. The E is silent.