Cacao is the scientific name for the cocoa bean, and the drink and other derivatives like cocoa butter are pronounced 'koko' in most parts of the English-speaking world, including Britain.
Using the IPA, it would something like: ['koʊ.koʊ]
But it really depends on where you live in Britain; southerners would probably pronounce as described above while northerners might pronounce it more like: ['ko.ko]
Motyer
Mall is pronounced by some as Mal and by others as Morl in Britain
There are no unstressed, or schwa vowels in the American pronunciation of "necessary." In British pronunciation, the vowel of the third syllable is unstressed to the vanishing point: necess'ry
No. There are no long sounds in the pronunciation. (There is one in the British slang telly.)
International variances excluded, behemoth is "bee-HEE-muth". Unless it's a really BIG moth! The formal British English pronunciation is different. It is BEE'-huh-moth, with the accent on the BEE and the second syllable is huh instead of HEE and moth instead of muth. It sounds like a tomato /tomahto kind of thing. (See link takes you to the formal British English Pronunciation)
Cocoa = Coke + Ohh
co co
cocoa, palm oil, groundnuts
No
Motyer
Listen to British pronunciation!http://www.pronounceitright.com/pronuncia.php?id_pronuncia=5425
British dialectual pronunciation
to take some of there goods such as gold silks and cocoa
You can speak a Victorian dialogue using the Received pronunciation of British English. This is the pronunciation that was considered correct in Victorian times.
the British parliamentary system, the culture, the religion, the English language, plantations like tea , rubber, cocoa etc....
The American pronunciation is SKED-u-ull. The British pronunciation is SHED-u-ull. They're both right.
The US pronunciation has the short I sound, as "duh-LEM-uh". The British pronunciation uses the long I sound, as "dy-LEM-uh".