Dull has a short U (uh) sound.
It is a short OO (book, wood) sound, rather than short U (dull, hull).
Neither. It has a short U (uh) vowel sound.
No. The A has either a short U or short O sound (wuz, woz). The short A is heard in wax.
The O in pond is a short O as in pot and fond. An O only rarely has a short U sound (one, done, none, some, ton, won, another).
The O in 'who' is long, but it isn't a long 'o'. It's a long 'u'.
It is a short OO (book, wood) sound, rather than short U (dull, hull).
It is a short U sound (frum).
Short "u".
Neither. It has a short U (uh) vowel sound.
No. The A has either a short U or short O sound (wuz, woz). The short A is heard in wax.
The O in pond is a short O as in pot and fond. An O only rarely has a short U sound (one, done, none, some, ton, won, another).
No. The O in "of" has a short U vowel sound, as in up and ugly.
The O in 'who' is long, but it isn't a long 'o'. It's a long 'u'.
No. The A has either a short U or a short O sound (wuz, woz).
No. The A has either a short U or a short O sound (wuz, woz).
There are three major pronunciations of want, two of them short sounds.-- short O (to rhyme with font)-- caret O (to rhyme with haunt)*-- short U (to rhyme with bunt)*primarily British English (wawnt-ed)
Neither. The OO has a long OO (long U) sound as in doom and broom.