No. The pair OY (or OI) has a separate sound, different from long or short O.
The long O sound (oh) is seen in the similar words coaster and toaster.
No. It has the OW sound, which is not a long vowel sound.
No, the word "look" has a short OO sound as in "good."
It rhymes with book, cook, hook, nook, and took.
In US English, yes, because the O has an (oh) sound before the R, as in for.
In British English, the O is a "caret O" that with R sounds more like AW.
No. The O in move had the long OO (long U) sound, to rhyme with prove and groove.
The long O (oh) sound is seen in the color mauve(mohv).
Yes. You can hear the sound "oh" in told. It rhymes with bold and cold.
Yes. The W is silent, as is the final E. It is pronounced with (oh), the same as rote.
No. The O in dog is a "caret O" or AW sound, not an O (oh) sound.
The long O followed by a G appears in the word toga(toh-guh).
No. The O in log has a short O (ah) or caret O (aw) sound, as in bog and dog.
long o
It is a long O due to the silent E. It rhymes with pose and flows.
Is the word bone a short or long o sound?
Yes, invoke has a long o sound.
It has a long O sound - and can repeat a few times.
No. The O sound in dog is the AW/OR sound (caret O). This is the same sound heard in lawn and long, and in the rhyming words bog, log, and hog.
No, the word "stove" does not have a long vowel. In "stove," the "o" is pronounced with a short vowel sound as in "ah." Its pronunciation is /stoΚv/.
The usual vowel sound of the O in dog is an AW sound, which is written as a caret O, and is neither long nor short. *There is a variant pronunciation with a short O, to rhyme with cog.
The usual vowel sound of the O in dog is an AW sound, which is written as a caret O, and is neither long nor short. *There is a variant pronunciation with a short O, to rhyme with cog.
The word 'dog' has a short o sound, as does hop or mop. The long o sound is formed when there is an e at the end of the word, as in hope or mope, or when the o is coupled with a w, e.g. slow.
No. The O in dog is a "caret O" or AW sound, not an O (oh) sound.The long O followed by a G appears in the word toga(toh-guh).
long o
The O has a long O (oh) sound, as in bold and gold.
It's a long O
It has a long O (oh) sound, as in no and so.
The word "broke" has a long 'o' sound, like in the word "no."
No, "note" does not have a short "a" sound. It has a long "o" sound.