It has neither. The OY has the oi/oy diphthong sound, as in boil and toy.
No. The OY pair has the oi/oy vowel sound, which is a combination of long and short sounds.
No. The vowel sound is the OI/OY pair, as in boy, join, point, and oyster. It is neither long or short.
In the word "coin," the vowel sound is considered a diphthong, which means it is a combination of two vowel sounds. The "oi" in "coin" creates a long vowel sound, similar to the sound in the word "boy." This diphthong is a combination of the /ɔɪ/ sounds, where the /ɔ/ is the long vowel sound.
No. The OY pair has an OI sound as in boy, which sounds like O-I-E. This sound is considered neither long or short although it contains these long sounds.The -ous has a schwa or unstressed uhs sound.
The most common pronunciation of "oil", [ɔːjl̥], has one vowel which is considered "long" by phonetic / linguistic convention (actual length of the vowel). English "long" and "short" vowels are somewhat different; this vowel would probably be considered a "short O". Which makes things really confusing, because the vowel is now a "long short O" if you combine the systems.*Usually this OI/OY sound is not considered long or short, but you can see by pronouncing the OY that it is clearly a triphthong of the long vowels "O-I-E."It is seen in words such as boy, boil, toy, toil, noise, coin, and point.
No. The OY pair has the oi/oy vowel sound, which is a combination of long and short sounds.
No. The vowel sound is the OI/OY pair, as in boy, join, point, and oyster. It is neither long or short.
In the word "coin," the vowel sound is considered a diphthong, which means it is a combination of two vowel sounds. The "oi" in "coin" creates a long vowel sound, similar to the sound in the word "boy." This diphthong is a combination of the /ɔɪ/ sounds, where the /ɔ/ is the long vowel sound.
No. The OY pair has an OI sound as in boy, which sounds like O-I-E. This sound is considered neither long or short although it contains these long sounds.The -ous has a schwa or unstressed uhs sound.
The sound is considered neither long or short, as it is the OI/OY diphthong sound, as in boy and boil. (while the diphthong combines AW and IH, it has the same sound as long O-I-E)
The most common pronunciation of "oil", [ɔːjl̥], has one vowel which is considered "long" by phonetic / linguistic convention (actual length of the vowel). English "long" and "short" vowels are somewhat different; this vowel would probably be considered a "short O". Which makes things really confusing, because the vowel is now a "long short O" if you combine the systems.*Usually this OI/OY sound is not considered long or short, but you can see by pronouncing the OY that it is clearly a triphthong of the long vowels "O-I-E."It is seen in words such as boy, boil, toy, toil, noise, coin, and point.
The letter A as a letter has the long A : "the letter A is the vowel in cat" The use of A as an article (a boy, a plan) can be pronounced as a long A (ay) or a short schwa sound (uh). For example, "we saw a bird" is correct either way, but may have different connotations. The long A may sound odd in some cases.
The letter A as a letter has the long A : "the letter A is the vowel in cat" The use of A as an article (a boy, a plan) can be pronounced as a long A (ay) or a short schwa sound (uh). For example, "we saw a bird" is correct either way, but may have different connotations. The long A may sound odd in some cases.
The letter A as a letter has the long A : "the letter A is the vowel in cat" The use of A as an article (a boy, a plan) can be pronounced as a long A (ay) or a short schwa sound (uh). For example, "we saw a bird" is correct either way, but may have different connotations. The long A may sound odd in some cases.
The vowel sound in boy is spelled either u or oi.
The vowel sound in "boy" is neither long nor short. It is a diphthong consisting of an "o" followed by an "ee" (long "e") sound. A word with a short "o" sound is "Bob", and a word with a long "o" sound is "bone".
The vowel sound in boy sounds like Droid - also toy, soy, alloy. It is called the o-i dipththong.